Orozco Fadya, Cole Donald C, Muñoz Verónica, Altamirano Ana, Wanigaratne Susitha, Espinosa Patricio, Muñoz Fabian
International Potato Center, Quito, Ecuador.
Food Nutr Bull. 2007 Jun;28(2 Suppl):S247-57. doi: 10.1177/15648265070282S204.
Among small Andean potato farmers, greater pesticide use and better linkage to markets are promoted as ways to improve farm outputs and incomes. The health of household members is assumed to improve with higher incomes, although evidence to support such an assumption remains scarce.
Using a multidisciplinary approach, we sought to characterize agricultural systems producing potatoes and to assess relationships between these characteristics and farm household health indicators.
We included seven communities linked to a regional agricultural potato production platform (socioorganizational "space" for potato commercialization) in Chimborazo, Ecuador. The unit of analysis was the community, each of which was classified according to its level of intensity of potato production as more intensive, intermediate, or less intensive. Data on crop management, household food intake, child anthropometry, and impacts of pesticide use on adult health were collected by survey.
The net income from potato production was similar in communities with more intensive and intermediate production systems and lower in those with less intensive systems. However, deficits in protein intake were more common among children in communities with more intensive systems (63%) than among those in communities with intermediate (53%) and less intensive (37%) systems. Deficits in thiamin and riboflavin intake were more prevalent in communities with more and less intensive systems than in those with intermediate systems. In contrast, the prevalence of moderate chronic malnutrition, as measured by height-for-age, was greater among children in communities with less intensive systems (27%) than among those in communities with intermediate (5%) and more intensive (7%) systems. Across all intensities, frequent use of highly hazardous pesticides was associated with adverse health effects.
Agricultural development programs need to work more cross-sectorally to realize the potential health benefits associated with intensification of production.
在安第斯山脉的小土豆种植农户中,增加农药使用量以及加强与市场的联系被视为提高农场产量和收入的途径。尽管支持这一假设的证据仍然稀少,但人们认为随着收入的增加,家庭成员的健康状况会得到改善。
我们采用多学科方法,试图描述土豆生产农业系统的特征,并评估这些特征与农户健康指标之间的关系。
我们纳入了厄瓜多尔钦博拉索省与一个区域农业土豆生产平台(土豆商业化的社会机构“空间”)相关联的7个社区。分析单位是社区,每个社区根据其土豆生产集约化程度分为集约化程度较高、中等或较低。通过调查收集了作物管理、家庭食物摄入量、儿童人体测量数据以及农药使用对成人健康影响的数据。
集约化程度较高和中等的生产系统所在社区的土豆生产净收入相似,而集约化程度较低的社区净收入较低。然而,集约化程度较高的社区中,蛋白质摄入不足的儿童比例(63%)高于集约化程度中等(53%)和较低(37%)的社区。硫胺素和核黄素摄入不足在集约化程度较高和较低的社区比在集约化程度中等的社区更为普遍。相比之下,以年龄别身高衡量的中度慢性营养不良患病率在集约化程度较低的社区儿童中(27%)高于集约化程度中等(5%)和较高(7%)的社区。在所有集约化程度的社区中,频繁使用高危险性农药均与不良健康影响相关。
农业发展项目需要开展更多跨部门合作,以实现与生产集约化相关的潜在健康效益。