Jepsen S Dee, Pfeifer Lisa, Garcia Lyda G, Plakias Zoë, Inwood Shoshanah, Rumble Joy N, Rodriguez Mary T, Puskas Judit E, Custer Samuel G
Department of Food, Agricultural and Biological Engineering, College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, The Ohio State University , Wooster, OH, USA.
Department of Animal Sciences, College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, The Ohio State University , Columbus, OH, USA.
J Agromedicine. 2020 Oct;25(4):417-422. doi: 10.1080/1059924X.2020.1815623. Epub 2020 Oct 13.
During the spring 2020 COVID-19 outbreak, faculty and staff within Ohio State University's College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences came together from multiple disciplines to support essential agricultural workers. Concerted leadership from administration provided a framework for this interaction to occur while faculty worked off-campus to address the many issues identified by the agricultural community, the industry sector, and other state agencies. During the onset period, much of our work was reactive; our efforts to address worker safety and health involved three primary areas within: 1) production agricultural workers, 2) produce growers and direct marketing enterprises, and 3) meat supply chain workers. Communication to target audiences relied upon our ability to convert face-to-face programming into virtual webinars, social media, and digital publications. A Food System Task Force mobilized specialists to address emerging issues, with one specific topic related to Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). As we continue to face new seasons in agriculture production, and pockets of COVID-19 outbreaks within our state, we will continue to address the dynamic needs of our food supply systems. There are implications for how we will teach the agricultural workforce within a virtual platform, including the evaluation of the effectiveness of those training programs. There are renewed opportunities to integrate health and safety content into other Extension teams who conventionally focused on production practices and farm management topics. Several research themes emerged during subgroup dialog to pursue new knowledge in workers' cultural attitude and barriers, PPE design, PPE access, and overall attitude toward COVID-19 health practices.
在2020年春季新冠疫情爆发期间,俄亥俄州立大学食品、农业与环境科学学院的教职员工跨多个学科共同努力,为重要农业工作者提供支持。行政部门的协同领导为这种互动提供了框架,在此期间,教师们在校外工作,以解决农业社区、行业部门和其他州机构所确定的诸多问题。在疫情初期,我们的许多工作都是被动应对的;我们为解决工人安全与健康问题所做的努力涉及三个主要领域:1)农业生产工人;2)农产品种植者和直销企业;3)肉类供应链工人。针对目标受众的沟通工作依赖于我们将面对面活动转化为虚拟网络研讨会、社交媒体和数字出版物的能力。一个食品系统特别工作组动员专家们解决新出现的问题,其中一个具体主题与个人防护装备(PPE)有关。随着我们继续面对农业生产的新季节以及本州内新冠疫情的局部爆发,我们将继续满足食品供应系统不断变化的需求。这对我们如何在虚拟平台上培训农业劳动力产生影响,包括对这些培训项目有效性的评估。我们有了新的机会,将健康与安全内容整合到其他传统上专注于生产实践和农场管理主题的推广团队中。在小组讨论中出现了几个研究主题,旨在探索有关工人文化态度与障碍、个人防护装备设计、个人防护装备获取以及对新冠疫情防控措施的总体态度等方面的新知识。