University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Department of Community and Family Health, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA.
J Agromedicine. 2024 Oct;29(4):701-711. doi: 10.1080/1059924X.2024.2388869. Epub 2024 Aug 13.
This study aimed to explore farmworkers' experiences of social vulnerability during the peak period of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Telephone surveys of 63 migrant and seasonal farmworkers across three major agricultural areas in Florida were conducted. The survey, designed and disseminated with critical support from a statewide farmworker membership and advocacy organization, included items related to social and occupational precarity and a suite of demographic conditions, including specific employment-based indicators and categories. Data were analyzed with SPSS using a series of statistical significance tests including Pearson's Chi-Square, Fisher's Exact, T-tests, and Mann-Whitney U. An open-ended question regarding employment precarity was also analyzed for frequencies of responses pertaining to a set of descriptive categories.
Survey findings demonstrated a high degree of social vulnerability among the farmworker sample, with notable variation in the type and severity of vulnerability and risk exposure across employment-based indicators and occupational categories. For example, a cross-industry comparison between vegetable field workers and greenhouse nursery workers revealed a disparity in COVID-exposure risk through commuting characteristics, as 43% of vegetable field workers used shared, employer-provided transport, while 68% of nursery workers used personal vehicles.
While previous research has broadly established the extreme precarity of migrant and seasonal farmworkers during the peak COVID-19 period, the variability of experience, exposure to risk, and social vulnerability between farmworkers representing distinct employment-based indicators and occupational categories demonstrated in this study contributes to widening awareness of the importance of assessing farmworker experiences at a more granular level. In addition to delineating social vulnerability across key demographic categories, cross-industry comparisons between farmworkers revealed significant discrepancies in risk and vulnerability to COVID-19. Future research that further explores this variability may reveal opportunities to improve disaster-relief planning and mitigate social vulnerability in future disaster scenarios. The importance of surveying the vulnerability of worker populations, aside from geographic communities, is highlighted.
本研究旨在探讨新冠疫情高峰期期间农民工的社会脆弱性体验。
对佛罗里达州三个主要农业区的 63 名移民和季节性农民工进行了电话调查。该调查是在一个全州性的农民工会员和宣传组织的批判性支持下设计和传播的,其中包括与社会和职业不稳定性以及一系列人口统计学条件相关的项目,包括特定的就业指标和类别。使用 SPSS 对数据进行分析,包括一系列统计显著性检验,包括皮尔逊卡方检验、Fisher 精确检验、T 检验和 Mann-Whitney U 检验。还对就业不稳定性的开放式问题进行了分析,以确定与一组描述性类别相关的答复频率。
调查结果表明,农民工样本中存在高度的社会脆弱性,在基于就业的指标和职业类别中,脆弱性和风险暴露的类型和严重程度存在显著差异。例如,对蔬菜田间工人和温室苗圃工人的跨行业比较表明,通勤特征导致 COVID 暴露风险存在差异,43%的蔬菜田间工人使用雇主提供的共享交通工具,而 68%的苗圃工人使用个人车辆。
尽管先前的研究广泛确立了在新冠疫情高峰期期间移民和季节性农民工的极端脆弱性,但本研究中代表不同就业指标和职业类别的农民工之间的经验、风险暴露和社会脆弱性的差异,有助于提高对在更细粒度水平上评估农民工经验的重要性的认识。除了在关键人口统计学类别中划定社会脆弱性外,农民工之间的跨行业比较显示出对 COVID-19 的风险和脆弱性存在显著差异。进一步探索这种变异性的未来研究可能会为改善灾害救援规划和减轻未来灾害情景中的社会脆弱性提供机会。强调了除地理社区外,调查工人群体脆弱性的重要性。