COVID-19 Pandemic among low-income Latino families in an agricultural community: Financial, occupational, and mental and physical health sequelae
- Funded by National Institutes of Health (NIH)
- Total publications:0 publications
Grant number: 3R01ES026994-05S1
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Key facts
Disease
COVID-19Start & end year
20162021Known Financial Commitments (USD)
$161,528Funder
National Institutes of Health (NIH)Principal Investigator
Brenda EskenaziResearch Location
United States of AmericaLead Research Institution
University Of California-BerkeleyResearch Priority Alignment
N/A
Research Category
Epidemiological studies
Research Subcategory
Disease transmission dynamics
Special Interest Tags
N/A
Study Type
Non-Clinical
Clinical Trial Details
N/A
Broad Policy Alignment
Pending
Age Group
Adolescent (13 years to 17 years)Adults (18 and older)Children (1 year to 12 years)Infants (1 month to 1 year)Newborns (birth to 1 month)
Vulnerable Population
WomenMinority communities unspecified
Occupations of Interest
Other
Abstract
ABSTRACT We have been engaged in the CHAMACOS study (R01ES026994, PI-Eskenazi), a longitudinal cohort study ofmore than 600 Latino primarily farmworker families (N=600 mother-child dyads, N=1200) in the agricultural Salinas Valley California for 20+ years. The overaching aim of this study has been to investigate the health sequelae of pesticide exposure over the lifecourse from in utero to adulthood. In this proposal, we aim to study the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on these families. Low-income families, and particularly farmworker families, will likely be disproportionately infected by COVID-19 given cramped living quarters, their "essential"work status, traveling to work in crowded farmworker buses, and close working conditions on packing lines. In addition, substantial epidemiologic and toxicologic evidence suggests that pesticides, including organophosphates (OPs), organochlorines (OCs), carbamates, pyrethroids, the herbicide glyphosate, and ethylenebisdithiocarbamate (EBDC) fungicides can impact immunologic suppression and increase susceptibility to infectious diseases and more severe disease. For these reasons, we estimate that between 20%-40% of the CHAMACOS cohort will have been infected by January 2021. In addition, we hypothesize that the CHAMACOS cohort will be more impacted by the pandemic given poverty, insecure employment, risk for food scarcity, immigration status, and poor access to health services. For the 600 mother-child dyads, we have collected key information prior to the pandemic on health, financial and food security, and other relevant variables that may have been altered by the pandemic or increased risk of infection. The specific aims of this proposed supplement are to collect data post-COVID-19 to assess change in health (weight gain, increase in blood pressure, increase in anxiety or depression), food and housing security, access to medical care for COVID-19 or non-COVID-19 related conditions, fear of immigration authorities, barriers to protective behaviors during the pandemic (crowded housing, no indoor running water, workplace policies), and SARS-CoV-2 infection by serology. We will assess whether cumulative pesticide exposure increased risk for infection and disease. Pesticide exposure will be determined in two ways: by using California's unique Pesticide Use Reporting data linked to 20-year residentialhistory (the lifetime of the child) and using existing biomarkers of exposure (including prenatal and early lifeexposure of the child). To our knowledge, there is no other study of a similar population given the hard-to-reach nature of this cohort, the richness of the existing data, and our long-term relationship with the families and the community. Thus, our proposal will give a rare window into a population at high-risk of contracting COVID-19 and our unique opportunity to understand how the pandemic affects low-income Latino families who are living and working in a farmworker community is unsurpassed.