Abstract

Efforts to disseminate heat-related illness (HRI) prevention practices among Latino farmworkers represent a critical occupational safety strategy in Florida. Targeted initiatives, however, require understanding the workplace dynamics that guide agricultural safety behaviors. This article reports focus group data collected in 2018 from citrus harvesters in central Florida and provides an in-depth perspective on the workplace culture that shapes their implementation of heat safety measures. Results indicate that citrus harvesters regularly suffered HRI symptoms yet rarely reported or sought treatment for their injuries. In some cases, the risks of developing HRI were accepted as a facet of agricultural work and harvesters blamed themselves for their illnesses. Implementation of safety practices hinged less on knowledge than on the availability of water and rest breaks and the quality of employer-employee relations and exchanges. Thus, trust was a determinant of workers’ attitudes toward management that contributed to a harvesting operation’s safety climate. Results highlight the difficulties of putting into practice measures that are not rewarded by the workplace culture and suggest that the extent to which intervention strategies promote not only individual safety behaviors but organizational accountability may predict their effectiveness.

Highlights

  • Heat-related illnesses (HRI) and deaths are preventable [1], Latino farmworkers in the U.S face situational, economic, and social constraints that compromise their access to safety information and implementation of prevention practices [2,3,4,5]

  • It reports focus group research aimed at identifying risk perceptions of heat-related illness (HRI), benefits and barriers to prevention, and opportunities for broader implementation of heat safety precautions

  • The findings provide insight into the mechanisms underlying implementation of injury prevention behaviors among Latino farmworkers and point to strategies for enhanced promotion of workplace safety

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Summary

Introduction

Heat-related illnesses (HRI) and deaths are preventable [1], Latino farmworkers in the U.S face situational, economic, and social constraints that compromise their access to safety information and implementation of prevention practices [2,3,4,5]. The majority of whom are originally from Mexico, consistently experience some of the highest rates of occupational heat-related deaths in the country [4,12]. This article examines the decisions Florida citrus harvesters make about their safety and the work context that drives them. It reports focus group research aimed at identifying risk perceptions of HRI, benefits and barriers to prevention, and opportunities for broader implementation of heat safety precautions. The qualitative data captures workplace norms, safety attitudes, and personal experiences

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