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Pesticide Illness Investigations

About our investigations

Examples of reported cases

What DOH collects during case investigation

How DOH classifies cases

Data analysis

Limitations of DOH pesticide illness surveillance data

 About our investigations

The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) investigates reports of acute adverse health effects resulting from exposure to pesticides. The types of reports that we investigate include:

  • Exposures to insecticides, herbicides, fungicides, rodenticides, and any other pesticides defined under federal law (FIFRA-Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act). DOH does not investigate exposures to disinfectants.

  • Workplace and home exposures.

  • Exposures to over-the-counter pesticides and restricted-use pesticides used by professional pesticide applicators.

  • Case reports of systemic symptoms, irritant symptoms, skin and eye injuries, and allergic symptoms.

 Examples of reported cases                                              

  • 83 year old female developed skin rash after garden insecticide leaked onto her hand.

  • 18 month old child experienced seizure after accidentally ingesting lindane lice shampoo.
  • Professional pest control technician developed eye injury after splashing herbicide into right eye.
  • Three apple harvesters experienced nausea and vomiting after insecticide drifted into their work area.
  • Agricultural field workers developed allergic contact dermatitis after exposure to pesticide residues on foliage.

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 What DOH collects during case investigation                         

The typical case investigation involves:

  • interviews with symptomatic persons and/or witnesses.

  • review of relevant medical records and clinical laboratory results.

  • review of pesticide spray records or interview with the applicator to confirm the pesticide product involved.

Interviews may be conducted by phone or at the patient’s home or work site. DOH does not have a laboratory for processing environmental samples, but will review the results of sampling conducted by other agencies such as WSDA or L&I, who may also be involved in the case. Suspected violations may be referred to Washington State Department of Agriculture or Washington State Department of Labor and Industries.

 How DOH classifies cases                                         

DOH uses a standard protocol for classifying cases as to the likelihood that the symptoms reported are related to a pesticide exposure.

This protocol was developed by the National Institutes of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH and is used by most other states that conduct illness prevention. The full protocol is available at the NIOSH website.  All cases investigated by DOH are submitted to internal review to assure high quality and standard coding of pesticide illness cases.

The chart below provides a basic description of the case classification criteria for acute pesticide-related illness and injury.

Classification of Acute Pesticide-Related Illness and Injury
Category

Description

Definite

Objective evidence confirms both the exposure and the health effects. Objective evidence of the exposure include residues detected in the environment or positive results from biological testing for human exposure to a pesticide. Objective evidence of health effects includes documented observation by a health care provider of clinical signs or symptoms.

The symptoms and pattern of symptom onset are consistent with what is known from human health and toxicology studies on the pesticide.

Probable

Objective evidence of either the pesticide exposure or the health effects is available.  

The symptoms and pattern of symptom onset are consistent with what is known from human health and toxicology studies on the pesticide.

Possible

Only subjective evidence of exposure and health effects is available. The exposure may be reported by the case and/or a witness, and supported by pesticide spray records. The case may have been seen by an health care provider. However, all symptoms were self-reported and were not documented by a health care provider.

The symptoms and pattern of symptom onset are consistent with what is known from human health and toxicology studies on the pesticide.

Suspicious

Subjective or objective evidence of both the pesticide exposure and the health effects are available.

However, there is insufficient toxicological or exposure information available to determine whether the symptoms and pattern of symptom onset are consistent with what is known from human health and toxicology studies on the pesticide.

Unlikely The relationship between the reported exposure and health effects is not consistent with the known toxicology of the pesticide. Symptoms may be atypical but cannot be ruled out as unrelated.
Insufficient Information Insufficient documentation on the exposure or the health effects was available to determine whether the health effects were related to the pesticide exposure. 
Not a case An individual may have been reported to a state surveillance system due to an alleged exposure, but was asymptomatic; or it was determined that health effects were due to a condition other than a pesticide exposure.

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 Data analysi                                                                 

Information collected during case investigations is entered into the Pesticide Illness Monitoring System (PIMS) database. PIMS is searchable by a number of variables including county, target crop, site of exposure, pesticide type, pesticide active ingredient, and demographic information. Analysis on PIMS data is conducted and published annually in the PIRT report.

Because the database contains personal identifiers and medical information, it is not open to public viewing at this time. Contact Pesticide Program staff for additional data inquiries.

 Limitations of DOH pesticide illness surveillance data                           

The data collected by DOH have limitations because:

  1. The surveillance program investigates acute illnesses and injuries only. DOH does not investigate chronic or latent effects of pesticides. These types of effects include cancer, birth defects, developmental abnormalities, and neurological disease. Chronic and latent effects of low-level pesticide exposure require investigative tools and resources that are different than the passive surveillance tools and resources that are available to DOH at this time. There are several regional research institutions that are actively studying these types of effects.
  2. Not all cases of pesticide illness are reported to DOH. The case may not be reported if the sick person does not seek health care, if the person seeks health care but the health care provider fails to recognize it as pesticide-related illness, or if the health care provider does not report the case as required. Under-reporting is a common problem among all states that monitor pesticide-related illnesses and among passive surveillance systems in general. 

WA State recently undertook a 3-year study to identify barriers to reporting and possible remedies for under-reporting. The study used focus groups to gather information from agricultural workers to assess their health seeking behaviors. The majority of participating farm workers said that they have not and/or would not seek health care for mild or moderate severity illnesses if they thought the illness was pesticide-related. The primary reason cited was cost resulting from time off work and cost of medical care. 

The study also included a review of medical records for Yakima area clinics and hospitals. For cases of Yakima County agricultural workers who did seek health care and were assigned a pesticide-related diagnosis, the DOH Pesticide Program received the case reports 60% of the time. DOH is currently taking steps to improve reporting rates for cases of pesticide illness.

The full report on this study, Improving Data Quality in Pesticide Illness Surveillance, is available on the Pesticide Illness Publications Web page.

  1. Information on reported cases may be insufficient to document the case.  We may not be able to locate a seasonal worker for our interview. We may not be able to determine where pesticide spray drift originated.  We may not be able to identify a pesticide product. Such cases are entered into the PIMS database but are not included in most analyses of DOH data.

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For more information about the Pesticides Program, please contact Cynthia Lσpez or 360-236-3340.

 


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    Last Update : 09/05/2007 02:26 PM