Do Economic Stresses Influence Child Work Hours on Family Farms?

Abstract Background: Economic stresses are a frequently cited reason for children doing farm work. Objective: To explore the relationship between economic indicators and child agricultural work hours between 2001 and October 2003. Methods: This ecologic study design compares trends in aggregate child work hours with national and regional economic indicators. Child work hours were obtained from quarterly surveillance data from a randomized field trial of agricultural task guidelines for children. Two thousand three hundred and sixty children living or working on 845 farms in central New York participated in the original study. The relationship between child work hours and three economic indicators: national all farm index (AFI) ratio, national fuel index, and regional milk prices was analyzed using time series plots, correlation, and multiple linear regression. Results: The AFI ratio was positively correlated with child work hours (r = 0.49, p = 0.008) but there was no significant correlation between child work hours and fuel or milk prices. Multiple linear regression demonstrated that the relationship between AFI and child work hours is independent of a seasonal effect. Conclusions: Increased child work hours may be associated with periods of higher farm sector productivity, rather than economic stress per se. Findings are limited by the ecologic study design, use of national economic indicators, and the limited number of cycles of child work hours available for time series analysis. Economic conditions may influence decisions about children's farm work.

[1]  V. A. Wilk,et al.  Health hazards to children in agriculture. , 1993, American journal of industrial medicine.

[2]  Henry P. Cole,et al.  The Process of Chore Teaching: Implications for Farm Youth Injury , 1997 .

[3]  F. Rivara,et al.  Fatal and non-fatal farm injuries to children and adolescents in the United States, 1990-3. , 1997, Injury prevention : journal of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention.

[4]  G P DeMuri,et al.  Farm injuries in children: a review. , 2000, WMJ : official publication of the State Medical Society of Wisconsin.

[5]  D L Nordstrom,et al.  A population based case-control study of agricultural injuries in children. , 1996, Injury prevention : journal of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention.

[6]  R L Berg,et al.  Agricultural work activities reported for children and youth on 498 North American farms. , 2001, Journal of agricultural safety and health.

[7]  R. Fisher Statistical methods for research workers , 1927, Protoplasma.

[8]  L. Stallones,et al.  Epidemiological perspectives on childhood agricultural injuries within the United States. , 1994, Journal of agromedicine.

[9]  B. Lee,et al.  Factors influencing exposure of children to major hazards on family farms. , 1997, The Journal of rural health : official journal of the American Rural Health Association and the National Rural Health Care Association.

[10]  T R Waters,et al.  Job hazards for musculoskeletal disorders for youth working on farms. , 2000, Journal of agricultural safety and health.

[11]  Steven Neufeld,et al.  Not raising a "bubble kid": farm parents' attitudes and practices regarding the employment, training and supervision of their children. , 2002, The Journal of rural health : official journal of the American Rural Health Association and the National Rural Health Care Association.

[12]  D. Wegman Work Should Help Teens, Not Hurt Them , 1999, Pediatrics.

[13]  D Stueland,et al.  Agricultural injuries in children in central Wisconsin. , 1991, The Journal of trauma.

[14]  P. Landrigan,et al.  Child labor still with us after all these years. , 1997, Public health reports.

[15]  Jongsoog Kim,et al.  Factors affecting children's participation and amount of labor on family farms. , 2004, Journal of safety research.

[16]  C. Wallace,et al.  Young People and the Division of Labour in Farming Families , 1994 .

[17]  K. Donham,et al.  Rural Youth Disability Prevention Project Survey: results from 169 Iowa farm families. , 1991, Journal of Rural Health.