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Pesticides Use Practice by Market Gardeners in Lome (Togo)

Pesticides are more and more used in African countries. The aim of this study is to evaluate the risk and the impact of pesticides on gardener's health. It is a transversal descriptive study, which referred to vegetable growers, held in Lomé on the period from May 20 to June 5, 2017. Forty-eigh...

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Autores principales: Diallo, Aboudoulatif, Zotchi, Komi, Lawson-evi, Povi, Bakoma, Batomayena, Badjabaissi, Essotolom, Kwashie, Eklu-Gadegkeku
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7528109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33029138
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8831873
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author Diallo, Aboudoulatif
Zotchi, Komi
Lawson-evi, Povi
Bakoma, Batomayena
Badjabaissi, Essotolom
Kwashie, Eklu-Gadegkeku
author_facet Diallo, Aboudoulatif
Zotchi, Komi
Lawson-evi, Povi
Bakoma, Batomayena
Badjabaissi, Essotolom
Kwashie, Eklu-Gadegkeku
author_sort Diallo, Aboudoulatif
collection PubMed
description Pesticides are more and more used in African countries. The aim of this study is to evaluate the risk and the impact of pesticides on gardener's health. It is a transversal descriptive study, which referred to vegetable growers, held in Lomé on the period from May 20 to June 5, 2017. Forty-eight (48) growers participated in the study. Men accounted for 70.8% of the study population against 29.2% of women. The level of education was primary (47.9%) in the majority of cases. Married people or couples represented 77.1% of cases. Most gardeners (72.9%) has no training in the use of pesticides. Pesticides were consistently applied (100%), including insecticides (72.7%), herbicides (9.1%), and fungicides (18.2%). Of 20 pesticides collected, 9 (45%) were approved by our authorities. Only 43.8% of growers were supplied with pesticides from authorized structures of agricultural products. Branches of plants (79.2%) were the spray means of most of the pesticides. Most gardeners (79, 2%) did not use personal protective equipment because of lack of resources for 81.6% of them. Water and environment contamination risk by pesticides was known by only 6.3% of gardeners. Among the adverse effects reported, pruritus was the majority in 85.4% of cases followed by headache (70.8%), cough (68.8%), and muscle pain (64.6%). The training of gardeners, monitoring and control of this informal sector, and the monitoring of unregistered pesticides will help to reduce the risk of poisoning of gardeners and consumers of vegetables as well as environmental pollution.
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spelling pubmed-75281092020-10-06 Pesticides Use Practice by Market Gardeners in Lome (Togo) Diallo, Aboudoulatif Zotchi, Komi Lawson-evi, Povi Bakoma, Batomayena Badjabaissi, Essotolom Kwashie, Eklu-Gadegkeku J Toxicol Research Article Pesticides are more and more used in African countries. The aim of this study is to evaluate the risk and the impact of pesticides on gardener's health. It is a transversal descriptive study, which referred to vegetable growers, held in Lomé on the period from May 20 to June 5, 2017. Forty-eight (48) growers participated in the study. Men accounted for 70.8% of the study population against 29.2% of women. The level of education was primary (47.9%) in the majority of cases. Married people or couples represented 77.1% of cases. Most gardeners (72.9%) has no training in the use of pesticides. Pesticides were consistently applied (100%), including insecticides (72.7%), herbicides (9.1%), and fungicides (18.2%). Of 20 pesticides collected, 9 (45%) were approved by our authorities. Only 43.8% of growers were supplied with pesticides from authorized structures of agricultural products. Branches of plants (79.2%) were the spray means of most of the pesticides. Most gardeners (79, 2%) did not use personal protective equipment because of lack of resources for 81.6% of them. Water and environment contamination risk by pesticides was known by only 6.3% of gardeners. Among the adverse effects reported, pruritus was the majority in 85.4% of cases followed by headache (70.8%), cough (68.8%), and muscle pain (64.6%). The training of gardeners, monitoring and control of this informal sector, and the monitoring of unregistered pesticides will help to reduce the risk of poisoning of gardeners and consumers of vegetables as well as environmental pollution. Hindawi 2020-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7528109/ /pubmed/33029138 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8831873 Text en Copyright © 2020 Aboudoulatif Diallo et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Diallo, Aboudoulatif
Zotchi, Komi
Lawson-evi, Povi
Bakoma, Batomayena
Badjabaissi, Essotolom
Kwashie, Eklu-Gadegkeku
Pesticides Use Practice by Market Gardeners in Lome (Togo)
title Pesticides Use Practice by Market Gardeners in Lome (Togo)
title_full Pesticides Use Practice by Market Gardeners in Lome (Togo)
title_fullStr Pesticides Use Practice by Market Gardeners in Lome (Togo)
title_full_unstemmed Pesticides Use Practice by Market Gardeners in Lome (Togo)
title_short Pesticides Use Practice by Market Gardeners in Lome (Togo)
title_sort pesticides use practice by market gardeners in lome (togo)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7528109/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33029138
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8831873
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