Journal article
Farm Activities Associated with Eye Injuries in the Agricultural Health Study
Journal of Agromedicine, Vol.13(1), pp.17-22
06/27/2008
DOI: 10.1080/10599240801986025
PMID: 19042689
Abstract
Farmers are at risk for work-related eye injuries, some of which can be very serious. This study describes the farm activities that were related to eye injury in a group of 36 Iowa farmers in the Agricultural Health Study who sustained 40 farmwork-related eye injuries requiring medical advice or treatment. Farm activities of grinding or cutting metal accounted for 11 (27.5%) of the eye injuries, welding for 3 (7.5%), and drilling for 2 (5%). The other 24 eye injuries were related to diverse farm activities. One injury was caused by an animal. Only one injury was caused by a chemical exposure. Foreign body in the eye was the most frequent type of eye injury overall, accounting for 32 (80%) of the eye injuries. Of those, 20 were metallic foreign bodies. Although none of the injuries required hospitalization, 10 eye injuries (25%) resulted in the farmer missing 1 to 5 days of work. At least three injuries occurred while farmers were wearing safety glasses/goggles. These results suggest that farmers are at risk for eye injury from activities such as grinding and cutting metal, welding, and drilling and from other diverse activities on the farm for which eye hazards may not have been anticipated. In addition, these findings have implications for use of appropriate eye protection during all farm activities.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Farm Activities Associated with Eye Injuries in the Agricultural Health Study
- Creators
- Nancy L Sprince - Department of Occupational and Environmental Health , The University of Iowa College of Public HealthCraig Zwerling - Department of Occupational and Environmental Health , The University of Iowa College of Public HealthPaul S Whitten - Department of Occupational and Environmental Health , The University of Iowa College of Public HealthCharles F Lynch - Department of Epidemiology , The University of Iowa College of Public HealthLeon F Burmeister - Department of Epidemiology , The University of Iowa College of Public HealthPatricia P Gillette - Department of Biostatistics , the University of Iowa College of Public HealthKendall Thu - Department of Anthropology , Northern Illinois UniversityMichael C.R Alavanja - National Cancer Institute
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Journal of Agromedicine, Vol.13(1), pp.17-22
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis Group
- DOI
- 10.1080/10599240801986025
- PMID
- 19042689
- ISSN
- 1059-924X
- eISSN
- 1545-0813
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 06/27/2008
- Academic Unit
- Occupational and Environmental Health; Epidemiology
- Record Identifier
- 9983995029202771
Metrics
12 Record Views