Affiliation:
1. College of Public Health, University of South Florida
2. University of Texas—Houston School of Public Health at El Paso
Abstract
This study evaluated prevalence of unsafe storage of toxic products and evaluated the association of demographic-socio-cultural variables with risk of young-child exposure to household poisons. Interviews were conducted with 698 low-income caregivers living on the U.S./Mexico border. Multiple-ordinal regression was used to analyze associations between very unsafe storage of toxic products and household factors. At least one toxic product was accessible to children in 49.4% of households and 18.5% of these households' stored substances very unsafely in that products were accessible and stored either in non-original containers or without childproof caps. At-risk households were associated with U.S.-born caregivers who were single, employed, and live in more U.S. acculturated communities. These homes stored an increased number of toxins and were more likely to house a smoker. U.S./Mexico border childhood poisoning prevention programs should focus on potentially acculturated families with personal and household characteristics akin to the U.S. mores and customs.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Education,General Medicine,Health(social science)
Cited by
5 articles.
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