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Florida Division of Environmental Health
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About the Program
The Florida Department of Health maintains statewide pesticide poisoning surveillance in cooperation with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention / National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

All PDF files, unless otherwise noted, are under 500 kb.

The Pesticide Poisoning Surveillance Program is part of the national Sentinel Event Notification System for Occupational Risks Opens in new window. (SENSOR).

The objectives of the Pesticide Exposure Surveillance Program are to effectively monitor and prevent pesticide poisoning in Florida

A worker sprayingThe Goals of the program include organizing a Working Group, establishing a centralized reporting site, investigating reports of pesticide poisoning, and conducting educational outreach activities. Department of Health and other state agency personnel, farm worker and farm worker advocacy organizations, academicians, grower organizations, agrochemical associations, and Florida Poison Information Network staff are collaborating on program goals. Collaboration activities and results are reviewed during quarterly meetings of the Working Group.

A worker sprayingThe Working Group is organized to address specific program tasks; database construction, educational material production, surveillance coordination, and worker training. Working Group members collaborate on database design, case definition revision, educational initiatives, and investigation and enforcement of state and federal pesticide laws. Working Group members also receive a weekly electronic bulletin of pesticide-related news articles and reports.

The Program has two main prevention and education initiatives underway. One initiative targets farm workers as a recognized high-risk group. The other initiative targets health care professionals to raise awareness regarding pesticide poisoning prevention, recognition, management, and reporting.

The farm worker education initiative targets female farm workers and is intended to provide information on pesticide safety and good prenatal care practices. The outreach tool (still under development) is a radio novella (audiocassette) in Spanish, Haitian Creole, and Q'anjobal (an indigenous Guatemalan language). The radio novella will be distributed by Working Group members and may receive airtime on radio stations serving farm worker communities.

A pesticide noticeAn education initiative targeting health professionals gathered experts on pesticide safety and medical management of poisoning cases for a live satellite teleconference on pesticide poisoning issues. This education initiative was telecast statewide on February 24, 1999. County Health Department, Rural Community Health Centers, Area Health Education Center staff and other health professionals participated at more than 40 sites around the state. The teleconference was intended to raise awareness among physicians of the potential health effects of pesticides on farm workers and other at-risk groups. More information, including a review of questions and answers generated during the Teleconference will be available soon.

A centralized reporting site has been established and is receiving reports of pesticide-related illness from multiple sources, including the County Health Departments, Florida Poison Information Network, Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, and farm worker advocacy groups. Reports are classified according to CDC/NIOSH'S definition Opens in new window. for pesticide-related illness.

Presentation: Pesticide Exposure Surveillance Program in Adobe format. Presentation (1.2Mb PDF)Opens in new window.
Phone Directory: Click for a directory of important phone numbers for pesticide information resources in Florida.

Directory

To report a pesticide-related illness or injury, please fill out the Pesticide Incident Monitoring Report (PIMS form) and send it to the Department of Health using the address or fax number at the bottom of the form. Pesticide Incident Monitoring Report formOpens in new window.
Under Florida law, email addresses are public record. If you do not want your email address released in response to a public records request, do not send electronic mail to this entity. Instead, contact this office by phone in writing.

Send email
to the Coordinator of the Pesticide Exposure Surveillance Program.
Email


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