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Urinary dialkyl phosphate levels before and after first season chlorpyrifos spraying amongst farm workers in the Western Cape,South Africa
Authors:Mohamed Aqiel Dalvie  Ina Naik  Kalavati Channa  Leslie London
Affiliation:1. Centre for Occupational and Environmental Health, School of Public Health and Family Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences , University of Cape Town , Cape Town, South Africa;2. National Institute for Occupational Health (NIOH) , Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract:The study investigated urinary levels of dialkyl phosphates resulting from pesticide exposure amongst 40 farm workers. Workers were tested (urinary dialkyl phosphate levels, anthropometry, short exposure questionnaire) before and after the first day of seasonal chlorpyrifos spraying. Median baseline urinary dialkyl phosphates was high amongst both non-applicators (1587.5 μg/g creatinine, n = 8) and applicators (365.6 μg/g creatinine, n = 9). There was not much evidence of an increase in post-spray dialkyl phosphates levels from pre-spray levels amongst both applicators and non-applicators. Hours mixing, spraying, driving a tractor and hours worked by non-applicators were not significantly associated with an increase in post-spray dialkyl phosphate levels, adjusting for age, height, weight, gender, use of empty pesticide containers and self-reported kidney problems. Past applicator status was weakly positively associated with pre-spray dialkyl phosphate levels adjusting for age, height, weight, and gender, self-reported kidney problems, smoking and alcohol (β= 1019.5, p = 0.307, R2= 0.28). The high dialkyl phosphate levels call for an epidemiological investigation into the health effects of organophosphorous pesticides.
Keywords:Pesticide exposure  bio-monitoring  chlorpyrifos  dialkyl phosphates  organophosphates  spraying  mixing  drift  occupational  environmental
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