Allpress Justine L E, Curry Ross J, Hanchette Carol L, Phillips Michael J, Wilcosky Timothy C
RTI International, 3040 Cornwallis Road, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA.
Int J Health Geogr. 2008 Apr 30;7:18. doi: 10.1186/1476-072X-7-18.
Recent advances in GIS technology and remote sensing have provided new opportunities to collect ecologic data on agricultural pesticide exposure. Many pesticide studies have used historical or records-based data on crops and their associated pesticide applications to estimate exposure by measuring residential proximity to agricultural fields. Very few of these studies collected environmental and biological samples from study participants. One of the reasons for this is the cost of identifying participants who reside near study fields and analyzing samples obtained from them. In this paper, we present a cost-effective, GIS-based method for crop field selection and household recruitment in a prospective pesticide exposure study in a remote location. For the most part, our multi-phased approach was carried out in a research facility, but involved two brief episodes of fieldwork for ground truthing purposes. This method was developed for a larger study designed to examine the validity of indirect pesticide exposure estimates by comparing measured exposures in household dust, water and urine with records-based estimates that use crop location, residential proximity and pesticide application data. The study focused on the pesticide atrazine, a broadleaf herbicide used in corn production and one of the most widely-used pesticides in the U.S.
We successfully used a combination of remotely-sensed data, GIS-based methods and fieldwork to select study fields and recruit participants in Illinois, a state with high corn production and heavy atrazine use. Our several-step process consisted of the identification of potential study fields and residential areas using aerial photography; verification of crop patterns and land use via site visits; development of a GIS-based algorithm to define recruitment areas around crop fields; acquisition of geocoded household-level data within each recruitment area from a commercial vendor; and confirmation of final participant household locations via ground truthing. The use of these procedures resulted in a sufficient sample of participants from 14 recruitment areas in seven Illinois counties.
One of the challenges in pesticide research is the identification and recruitment of study participants, which is time consuming and costly, especially when the study site is in a remote location. We have demonstrated how GIS-based processes can be used to recruit participants, increase efficiency and enhance accuracy. The method that we used ultimately made it possible to collect biological samples from a specific demographic group within strictly defined exposure areas, with little advance knowledge of the location or population.
地理信息系统(GIS)技术和遥感技术的最新进展为收集农业农药暴露的生态数据提供了新机会。许多农药研究使用了关于作物及其相关农药施用的历史数据或基于记录的数据,通过测量住宅与农田的距离来估计暴露情况。这些研究中很少有从研究参与者那里收集环境和生物样本的。其中一个原因是识别居住在研究农田附近的参与者并分析从他们那里获得的样本的成本。在本文中,我们提出了一种经济高效的、基于GIS的方法,用于在偏远地区的一项前瞻性农药暴露研究中选择农田和招募家庭。在很大程度上,我们的多阶段方法是在一个研究机构中进行的,但为了实地验证目的进行了两次简短的实地考察。该方法是为一项更大的研究开发的,该研究旨在通过比较家庭灰尘、水和尿液中的测量暴露与使用作物位置、住宅距离和农药施用数据的基于记录的估计来检验间接农药暴露估计的有效性。该研究聚焦于农药阿特拉津,一种用于玉米生产的阔叶除草剂,也是美国使用最广泛的农药之一。
我们成功地结合使用了遥感数据、基于GIS的方法和实地考察,在玉米产量高且阿特拉津使用量大的伊利诺伊州选择研究农田并招募参与者。我们的几步流程包括:使用航空摄影识别潜在的研究农田和居民区;通过实地考察核实作物模式和土地利用情况;开发一种基于GIS的算法来定义农田周围的招募区域;从商业供应商处获取每个招募区域内地理编码的家庭层面数据;以及通过实地验证确认最终参与者家庭的位置。使用这些程序从伊利诺伊州七个县的14个招募区域获得了足够数量的参与者样本。
农药研究中的挑战之一是识别和招募研究参与者,这既耗时又昂贵,尤其是当研究地点在偏远地区时。我们已经展示了如何使用基于GIS的流程来招募参与者、提高效率并增强准确性。我们使用的方法最终使得能够在严格定义的暴露区域内从特定人口群体中收集生物样本,而对位置或人口几乎没有预先了解。