Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Active, not recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
99999

Summary

Conditions
  • Asthma
  • Parkinson's Disease
Type
Observational
Design
Observational Model: CohortTime Perspective: Prospective

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 24 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Pesticides are a common environmental exposure due to their widespread use for agricultural, residential, and public health purposes. Farmers and their families represent a unique population for studying the chronic health effects of pesticides because farmers know what chemicals they use, furthermo...

Pesticides are a common environmental exposure due to their widespread use for agricultural, residential, and public health purposes. Farmers and their families represent a unique population for studying the chronic health effects of pesticides because farmers know what chemicals they use, furthermore, farmers tend to remain at the same location over most of their adult life. The Agricultural Health Study (AHS), a cohort of approximately 89,000 pesticide applicators and spouses from Iowa and North Carolina, is the largest US cohort study of individuals working with pesticides. The AHS cohort was enrolled in 1993 to 1997 to assess human health effects associated with well-characterized exposures to pesticides and other agricultural factors. Detailed exposure data were collected at enrollment and in two five-year follow-up interviews. As a result, the AHS has a wealth of information on pesticide use by both farmers and their spouses, as well as the ability to account for changes in pesticide use over time. Information on medical history and important covariates was also collected at enrollment and in the follow-up interviews, and will continue to be collected over time.Only mortality and cancer incidence are updated annually through linkage to vital statistics and cancer registries; all other health outcomes are based on self-reported information from participants.The accuracy of self-reported health outcome information can vary from quite good (e.g., asthma) to poor (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis). In order to ensure high quality epidemiologic analyses, validation of self-reported disease is necessary prior to statistical analysis. To date, several health endpoints have been validated through follow-up with AHS participants and their physicians. The purpose of the current protocol is three-fold: 1) update information on medical history and other important covariates through ongoing follow-up interviews of the cohort; 2) validate self-reported diseases among cohort participants over the duration of cohort follow-up (at least through 2020); and 3) complete initial contact of potential participants to inform them of other health outcome studies being conducted within the cohort by an outside institution. We will contact AHS cohort members to complete a follow-up interview allowing one of three modes of response: self-administered paper questionnaire, self-administered web survey (CAWI), and interviewer-administered telephone interview (CATI). We will contact proxy respondents if the participant is unable to provide information. We will validate a variety of diseases of interest as they are ascertained in the cohort. While the characteristics of the diseases may vary, the strategy for disease validation is similar to the cohort wide follow-up. Validation efforts may also include a request for permission to contact the participant s physician, and contacting the physician s office to obtain the relevant medical information. We will contact proxy respondents if the participant is unable to provide information.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT01399411
Collaborators
Not Provided
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Dale Sandler, Ph.D. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)