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Promoting
occupational safety among Indigenous workers
Over the past decade, increasing numbers of new migrants
have been arriving in the
United States from
indigenous communities in Mexico and Guatemala. Mixteco-, Zapotec-
and Trique-speaking workers from the state of Oaxaca, Mexico are
becoming a prominent component of the western migratory stream.
Mixtecs are the largest single group, representing approximately 5
to 10 percent of the total agricultural workforce.
In addition to speaking different languages, indigenous
workers have distinct cultural traditions not shared by other
Mexicans. They also have suffered discrimination both at home and
in the
United States. Few agencies have acquired the language skills or
cultural competence necessary to assist these workers. As a
consequence, indigenous farmworkers have only a limited awareness of
the workplace hazards they face or health services available in
nearby communities. Major challenges to developing outreach and
educational approaches for this population are the inability to
translate the spoken indigenous languages into a written format, the
variety of languages/dialects spoken, the lack of persons in the
health care and occupational health and safety community who speak
these languages, and the distinct cultural traditions of these
groups of workers.
Marginalized indigenous workers face additional economic
and cultural barriers to health care. Most health care
professionals are not aware of or do not recognize ethno-specific
illnesses intrinsic to indigenous cultures. Such illnesses include
susto (fright), aire (coldness), and mal de ojo (evil eye), whose
causes are linked to social, cultural, and spiritual events.
Furthermore, many health care providers do not recognize the
importance of the treatment options used by indigenous people,
including sweat baths, ritual healing, and medicinal plants.
Finally, very few clinics or hospitals in the
United States
have staff who are able to communicate effectively in an indigenous
language. Such cultural and language barriers result in distrust of
clinics and hospitals by indigenous migrants.
Promoting
Occupational Health of Indigenous Workers
Farmworker Justice is a partner in the NIOSH and NIEHS
funded project “Promoting Occupational Health of Indigenous
Workers.” The project, which began in August 2004, aims to
develop community-based strategies to improve health and safety
conditions and access to services for indigenous farmworkers in the
Willamette Valley of Oregon. The other partners in this project are
the Oregon
Law Center, the farmworker union PCUN (Pineros y Campesinos Unidos
del Noreste), Salud Medical Center and Portland State University.
In the next three years of this project, we will be
developing and implementing a peer education program to raise
farmworkers’ level of awareness of workplace hazards and the
practical things they can do to protect themselves and enforce their
rights.
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