Détails Publication
Self-reported health effects of pesticides among cotton farmers from the Central-West region in Burkina Faso,
Discipline: Sciences pharmaceutiques
Auteur(s): Jean Noël Dado Koussé, Sylvain Ilboudo, Jean Claude Romaric, Pingdwindé Ouédraogo, Moritz Hunsmann , Geoffroy Gueswindé Ouédraogo, Moussa Ouédraogo, Félix Bondo Kini , Sylvin Ouédraogo
Auteur(s) tagués: OUEDRAOGO Moussa
Renseignée par : OUEDRAOGO Moussa
Résumé

Pesticides are chemicals used to control pests with sometime harmful effects on human health. This paper presents results of self-reported health effects experienced by cotton farmers in the Central-West region of Burkina Faso. It was a cross-sectional survey conducted from October to December 2021 among 585 consenting conventional and organic cotton farmers. Data collected included pesticides used, they use conditions, farming practices, experienced health effects. Binary logistic regression was used to find relationships between self-reported health effects and the type of cotton produced. Results showed that all conventional cotton farmers (100%) reported using synthetic pesticides compared to organic ones who using only natural insecticides. Both conventional and organic farmers reported health effects that occurred at least once since they started using pesticides, involving skin effects (85.27% conventional, 65.52% organic), nervous (88.95% conventional, 48,71% organic), respiratory (88.10% conventional, 67.67% organic) systems. 99.72% of conventional farmers vs 46.98% of organic ones reported skin irritation following pesticide use. 69.97% of conventional vs 35.34% of organic cotton farmers reported acute signs such as severe headaches. In univariate and multivariate logistic regressions, severe headaches, dizziness, skin, and ocular effects were significantly associated with conventional farmers compared to organic ones (p

Mots-clés

Synthetic pesticides, Organic pesticides, Health effects, Cotton farmers

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