|
Project Clean Environment for Healthy Kids
Project Clean Environment for Healthy Kids is an
environmental health education project, created by Farmworker
Justice with support from the Health Resources and Services
Administration (HRSA), Border Health Program and the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Office of Research and
Development, under the auspices of the Border XXI Initiative.
The Project provides training to health
professionals and promotores de salud (lay health educators)
from both sides of the U.S. - Mexico border to address environmental
hazards that pose risks to health. It was initiated in four pairs of
border communities in 1999: McAllen, Texas – Reynosa, Mexico; Yuma
County, Arizona and San Luis, Mexico; El Paso, Texas – Ciudad
Juarez, Mexico; and the Coachella and Imperial Valleys of California
and Mexicali, Mexico.
To facilitate the peer education component, a
popular education style promotores de salud curriculum was
developed. It addresses pesticide safety at home and at work; lead
poisoning, water purification and safe waste disposal and ways to
reduce the frequency and severity of asthma. The curricula and
related handouts are available to be downloaded
by clicking here.
Educational brochures on asthma, lead poisoning and
pesticide safety in English and Spanish are available in PDF format.
Download them by clicking
here for English and
here for Spanish. Be patient: these illustrated pamphlets
may take a while to download.
Promotores de salud
are trained using the entire curriculum at 4 intensive one-day
workshops. With supervision from Farmworker Justice and its partner
community-based organizations (CBOs), the promotores then provide
peer education to members of their communities and other border
residents.
The health professional curriculum and training
events focus on the recognition, management and reporting of acute
and chronic pesticide-related health problems. Workshops are
organized by Farmworker Justice in conjunction with a local migrant
and community health center in the communities where the
promotores are active and one or two other border cities. The
principal trainer for these workshops is the internationally known
pesticide expert, Dr. Marion Moses. Dr. Moses has compiled a
reference manual on the common causes of pesticide exposure,
recognizing and managing acute poisoning cases and an analysis of
the epidemiological literature concerning the association between
pesticides and cancer, adverse reproductive outcomes, asthma and
neurological disorders, including Parkinson’s disease. The reference
manual is available to be downloaded by
clicking here. |