Temporal association of children's pesticide exposure and agricultural spraying: report of a longitudinal biological monitoring study.
Open Access
- 1 August 2002
- journal article
- Published by Environmental Health Perspectives in Environmental Health Perspectives
- Vol. 110 (8) , 829-833
- https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.02110829
Abstract
Environmental Health Perspectives is an Open Access journal published by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. Environmental Health Perspectives is an Open Access journal published by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The challenge of assessing children's residential exposure to pesticidesJournal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, 2000
- Pesticide Exposure of Children in an Agricultural Community: Evidence of Household Proximity to Farmland and Take Home Exposure PathwaysEnvironmental Research, 2000
- A modeling framework for estimating children's residential exposure and dose to chlorpyrifos via dermal residue contact and nondietary ingestion.Environmental Health Perspectives, 2000
- Biologic monitoring of exposure to organophosphorus pesticides in 195 Italian children.Environmental Health Perspectives, 2000
- Mechanisms underlying Children's susceptibility to environmental toxicants.Environmental Health Perspectives, 2000
- A longitudinal investigation of selected pesticide metabolites in urineJournal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology, 1999
- Improved Cleanup and Determination of Dialkyl Phosphates in the Urine of Children Exposed to Organophosphorus InsecticidesJournal of Analytical Toxicology, 1999
- Biological monitoring of organophosphorus pesticide exposure among children of agricultural workers in central Washington State.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1997
- Dietary exposure from pesticide application on farms in the Agricultural Health Pilot Study.1997
- Pesticides in household dust and soil: exposure pathways for children of agricultural families.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1995