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MCN Resources

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Cual es Su Numero? A1c

Spanish brochure for basic A1c patient education.
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La Prueba de A1c

Spanish version of Ascencia Healthcare brochure on A1c testing.
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Your Hemoglobin A1c: Know Your Number

A visual tool to use with patients to evaluate A1c results.
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Su Hemoglbina A1c: Conozca Su Numero

Spanish version of visual tool to use with patients to evaluate A1c results.
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Your TB Test (Spanish)

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Pesticide exposure and lead poisoning template for migrant clinicians

U.S. EPA, Region 5 developed this newsletter template to help clinicians integrate assessment and prevention into clinical practice.
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I PREPARE

A short and easy to remember strategy for taking a good exposure history.
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Preventing Agricultural Chemical Exposure: A Safety Program Manual

A participatory/popular education manual to train farmworkers in pesticide safety. Includes bilingual fact sheets. PACE Project, Wake Forest University.
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El Terror Invisible

A comic book produced by the PACE Project. You can also order these for $10 from the Department of Family and Community Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157-1084.
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Agua que no Has de Tratar Mejor Dejala Correr

an educational comic book that promotes safe hygiene and water disinfection techniques for families along the US-Mexico Border living without water and wastewater services. For more information contact the Veronica Corella-Barud (vcorella@utep.edu).
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WEBINAR: Structural Competencies in Migration Health

Part 1 of the 6 webinar series: Essential Clinical Issues in Migration Health

DATE RECORDED: March 19, 2014
PRESENTED BY:  Deliana Garcia, MA, International Research and Development, Migrant Clinicians Network

View Recorded Webinar  

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Repeated Pesticide Exposure among North Carolina Migrant and Seasonal Farmworkers

Limited data document the multiple and repeated pesticide absorption experienced by farmworkers in an agricultural season or their risk factors.

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Chronic Agricultural Chemical Exposure Among Migrant and Seasonal Farmworkers

Laboratory studies and case reports of accidental exposure to large amounts of chemicals indicate that there are immediate and long‐

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Acute Pesticide- Related Illness Among Working Youths, 1988-1999

The goal of this study was to describe acute occupational pesticide-related illnesses among youths and to provide prevention recommendations. Survey data from 8 states and from poison control center data were analyzed.

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Acute Occupational Pesticide- Related Illness in the US 1998-1999: Surveillance Findings From the SENSOR-Pesticides Program

Concern about the adverse public health and environmental effects of pesticide use is persistent. Recognizing the importance of surveillance for acute occupational pesticide-related illness, we report on surveillance for this condition across multiple states. Between 1998 and 1999, a total of 1,009 individuals with acute occupational pesticide-related illness were identified by states participating in the SENSOR-pesticides program. 

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The Surveillance of Work- Related Pesticide Illness: An Application of the Sentinel Event Notification Systems for Occupational Risks( SENSOR)

In response to limitations in state-based occupational disease surveillance, the California Department of Health Services developed a model for surveillance of acute, work-related pesticide illness. The objectives were to enhance case reporting and link case reports to preventive interventions. Risk factors for pesticide illness were prevalent. 

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California Surveillance for Pesticide- Related Illness and Injury: Coverage, Bias and Limitations

The California Pesticide Illness Surveillance Program (PISP) is a major resource for pesticide illness epidemiology. This work attempts to improve characterization of pesticide illness in California, evaluate case ascertainment of the PISP and identify PISP’s limitations and biases for studying the incidence and epidemiology of pesticide-related illness. 

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Surveillance for Pesticide- Related Disease

Public health surveillance for acute pesticide intoxications is discussed. Explanation of the goals, components and functions of population-based surveillance is provided with reference to key informational sources.

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Greater Risks, Fewer Rights: U.S Farmworkers and Pesticides

Pesticide Action Network, United Farmworkers of America, and California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation analyzed California government data on agricultural poisonings and enforcement of worker safety standards. Nearly 500 pesticide poisonings were reported for California farmworkers every year. The actual number of pesticide-related illnesses is unknown, since many poisonings go unreported. 

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Pesticide- related illness among migrant Farm Workers in the United States

Surveillance data show that pesticide-related illness is an important cause of acute morbidity among migrant farm workers in California. Exposures occur in various ways (e.g., residues, drift), suggesting that the use of pesticides creates a hazardous work environment for all farm workers  Improved education for health care providers should be a priority.

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