Abstract

(1) Background: Early life exposure to neurotoxic chemicals can have later impacts on child health. Most research designs must assume that current exposure is similar to past. Life history calendar methods can help to provide data on early life exposure. (2) Methods: Life history calendars were completed by mothers of 8-year-old children from Latinx farmworker and non-farmworker families (n = 73 and 65, respectively). Measures were created of months exposure through living adjacent to farm fields and having household members who worked in jobs exposing them to toxic chemicals. Data were divided into time periods of in utero, early childhood (birth-35 months) and later childhood (36–96 months). Cluster analysis compared the measures for children from farmworker and non-farmworker parents. (3) Results: Although, as a group, children from farmworker families have greater lifetime months of probable exposure to pesticides than children in non-farmworker families, cluster analysis reveals groups of children who do not follow that pattern. (4) Conclusions: The life history calendar is a technique for obtaining data on early life toxic chemical exposure that may help assign children to proper exposure groups. Conducting secondary analyses using such information can help to clarify the association of exposures to health outcomes.

Highlights

  • Pesticides used in the United States include substances that are potent neurotoxicants

  • The goal of this paper is to explore the use of life history calendars, to characterize and compare pesticide exposure in children in Latinx farmworker and non-farmworker families in the US

  • We have characterized exposure in three periods: prenatal, early childhood and later childhood. These periods are of value, because the exact critical period for the effects of pesticides on the developing child is not known [27,28]

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Summary

Introduction

Pesticides used in the United States include substances that are potent neurotoxicants. Agricultural workers are exposed directly to multiple classes of pesticides and pesticide residues in their work [1,2,3,4], and these workers are often the vector by which pesticides enter the home and result in indirect exposure of family members [5,6], including pregnant women and children [7]. Members are subject to direct exposure by drift from nearby fields and from using pesticides for the control of pests in housing, which is often in poor repair, gardens and yards [8,9]. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 3478; doi:10.3390/ijerph17103478 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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