The New York Center for Agricultural Medicine and Health (NYCAMH), in partnership with investigators from Penn State (PSU), Cornell (CD), SUNY- Albany, Harvard (H) and Connecticut (UConn), proposes another five years of support for the Northeast Center for Agricultural Health. The goals of the Northeast Center (NEC) remain unchanged: 1) Focus on issues epidemiologically identified as high risk in the northeast region; 2) Address populations known or suspected to be facing increased risk; 3) Reach out to resources throughout the Northeast; 4) Collaborate actively with NIOSH and other national resources; 5) Carefully evaluate all Education and Prevention projects. In pursuit of these goals, NEC will focus in particular upon activities that emphasize significant community input and that rely upon ergonomic re-design and engineering modification. The Administrative Core based at NYCAMH provides Feasibility Projects and Outreach that serve the entire region. The Administrative Core also provides project design and statistical support to center projects desiring these services. Project / center evaluation will be reported to an External Board, NIOSH and the joint centers evaluation effort (Goals 4, 5). A Research Core plans two exploratory -1) Hearing loss in farm youth (H) and 2) Cytokine levels and in farmers (SUNY) - and three R01 projects. Proposed now is continuation of work on: 3) Safe tractor operation (PSU) and a new five year effort that will use emergency medical services reports to build a 4) NY Statewide agricultural injury surveillance system (NYCAMH). A later supplementary application will propose a 5) Comparison of two interventions for musculoskeletal disease in nursery workers (UConn). These projects address Goals 1, 2 and 3. Total funding for research activities is 32% of total direct costs. Three Prevention (28% total budget) proposals include 1) Effectiveness of NAGCAT; 2) Community-based migrant intervention (UConn) and a related """"""""Northeast Community Intervention Network"""""""" (NYCAMH); and examination of 3) Loss control methodology to reduce injuries (CU). These address Goals 1,2,3, and 4. Three Translation projects (27% total budget) -1) Social marketing of rollover protection (NYCAMH); 2) Marketing of an ergonomic apple bucket (NYCAMH) and 3) Safe entry of manure facilities (PSU).- These projects, all successful research initiatives from NEC's last cycle, address Goals 1,2,3, 4. In addition to the proposed network of community-based teams, six projects rely heavily on community input. Six projects are devoted to engineering / ergonomic solutions for significant Northeastern problems. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Type
Special Cooperative Investigations/Assessment of Control/Prevention Methods (U50)
Project #
5U50OH007542-08
Application #
7475654
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZOH1-SBO (53))
Program Officer
Robison, William
Project Start
2001-09-30
Project End
2011-08-31
Budget Start
2008-09-01
Budget End
2009-08-31
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$898,366
Indirect Cost
Name
Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital
Department
Type
DUNS #
020672820
City
Cooperstown
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
13326
Myers, Melvin; Kelsey, Timothy; Tinc, Pam et al. (2018) Rollover Protective Structures, Worker Safety, and Cost-Effectiveness: New York, 2011-2017. Am J Public Health 108:1517-1522
Quandt, Sara A; Schulz, Mark R; Chen, Haiying et al. (2016) Visual Acuity and Self-Reported Visual Function among Migrant Farmworkers. Optom Vis Sci 93:1189-1195
Arditti, Joyce A; Kennington, Mathis; Grzywacz, Joseph G et al. (2014) Fathers in the Fields: Father Involvement Among Latino Migrant Farmworkers. J Comp Fam Stud 45:537-557
Scribani, Melissa; Wyckoff, Sherry; Jenkins, Paul et al. (2013) Migrant and seasonal crop worker injury and illness across the northeast. Am J Ind Med 56:845-55
Arcury, Thomas A; O'Hara, Heather; Grzywacz, Joseph G et al. (2012) Work safety climate, musculoskeletal discomfort, working while injured, and depression among migrant farmworkers in North Carolina. Am J Public Health 102 Suppl 2:S272-8
Quandt, Sara A; Schulz, Mark R; Talton, Jennifer W et al. (2012) Occupational eye injuries experienced by migrant farmworkers. J Agromedicine 17:63-9
Carrabba, James; Wyckoff, Sherry; Scribani, Melissa et al. (2012) Farm safety education in New York Mennonite schools. J Agromedicine 17:338-44
Sandberg, Joanne C; Grzywacz, Joseph G; Talton, Jennifer W et al. (2012) A cross-sectional exploration of excessive daytime sleepiness, depression, and musculoskeletal pain among migrant farmworkers. J Agromedicine 17:70-80
Scott, Erika E; Earle-Richardson, Giulia; Krupa, Nicole et al. (2011) A correction factor for estimating statewide agricultural injuries from ambulance reports. Ann Epidemiol 21:767-72
Earle-Richardson, Giulia B; Jenkins, Paul L; Scott, Erika E et al. (2011) Improving agricultural injury surveillance: a comparison of incidence and type of injury event among three data sources. Am J Ind Med 54:586-96

Showing the most recent 10 out of 18 publications