ORCA Database


Title:
Occupational and Environmental Exposures Among Alaska Native and American Indian People Living in Alaska and the Southwest United States
Author:
Diana Redwood, Laurie Orell, Anne Lanier, Michael Brubaker, Lillian Tom-Orme, Carmen George, Sandra Edwards, Martha Slattery
Date Published:
5/2012
Description:
Most occupational and environmental research describes associations between specifc occupational and environmental hazards and health outcomes, with little information available on population-level exposure, especially among unique subpopulations. The authors describe the prevalence of self-reported lifetime exposure to nine occupational and environmental hazards among 11,326 American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) adults enrolled in the Education and Research Towards Health (EARTH) Study in the Southwest U.S. and Alaska. The top three hazards experienced by AI/AN people in Alaska were petroleum products, military chemicals, and asbestos. The top three hazards experienced by AI/AN living in the Southwest U.S. were pesticides, petroleum, and welding/silversmithing. The study described here found that male sex, lower educational attainment, AI/AN language use, and living in the Southwest U.S. (vs. Alaska) were all associated with an increased likelihood of hazard exposure. The authors’ study provides baseline data to facilitate future exposure-response analyses. Future studies should measure dose and duration as well as environmental hazards that occur in community settings.
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