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Farmer perceptions and pesticide use practices in vegetable production in Ghana.
Pest Manag Sci. 2006 Apr; 62(4):356-65.PM

Abstract

As an initial part of a programme aimed at promoting safe and sound agricultural practices in Ghana, a study was made of farmers' perceptions of pesticides for use and application in vegetable production, using a small survey of 137 farmers who applied pesticides. Field surveys, interviews, questionnaires and analytical games were used to obtain information on the type, scope and extent of use of pesticides, farmers' knowledge of pesticides, and their perceptions about the chemicals' potential for harm. Data from this sample of farmers were used to describe the status of use of pesticides in vegetable cultivation in Ghana. Using chi2 tests, associations between farmers' age and possible pesticide poisoning symptoms, their farm size and method of spraying pesticides, and their perception of pesticide hazard and its perceived effectiveness against pests were also examined. The survey showed that knapsack sprayers were the most widely used type of equipment for spraying pesticides. However, on large-scale vegetable farms of 6-10 acres, motorised sprayers were also used. Various inappropriate practices in the handling and use of pesticides caused possible poisoning symptoms among those farmers who generally did not wear protective clothing. Younger farmers (<45 years of age) were the most vulnerable group, probably because they did more spraying than older farmers (>45 years of age). Farmers did not necessarily associate hazardous pesticides with better pest control. The introduction of well-targeted training programmes for farmers on the need for and safe use of pesticides is advocated.

Authors+Show Affiliations

CSIR Water Research Institute, PO Box AH 38, Achimota, Ghana. ntow@excite.comNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16532443

Citation

Ntow, William J., et al. "Farmer Perceptions and Pesticide Use Practices in Vegetable Production in Ghana." Pest Management Science, vol. 62, no. 4, 2006, pp. 356-65.
Ntow WJ, Gijzen HJ, Kelderman P, et al. Farmer perceptions and pesticide use practices in vegetable production in Ghana. Pest Manag Sci. 2006;62(4):356-65.
Ntow, W. J., Gijzen, H. J., Kelderman, P., & Drechsel, P. (2006). Farmer perceptions and pesticide use practices in vegetable production in Ghana. Pest Management Science, 62(4), 356-65.
Ntow WJ, et al. Farmer Perceptions and Pesticide Use Practices in Vegetable Production in Ghana. Pest Manag Sci. 2006;62(4):356-65. PubMed PMID: 16532443.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Farmer perceptions and pesticide use practices in vegetable production in Ghana. AU - Ntow,William J, AU - Gijzen,Huub J, AU - Kelderman,Peter, AU - Drechsel,Pay, PY - 2006/3/15/pubmed PY - 2006/6/14/medline PY - 2006/3/15/entrez SP - 356 EP - 65 JF - Pest management science JO - Pest Manag Sci VL - 62 IS - 4 N2 - As an initial part of a programme aimed at promoting safe and sound agricultural practices in Ghana, a study was made of farmers' perceptions of pesticides for use and application in vegetable production, using a small survey of 137 farmers who applied pesticides. Field surveys, interviews, questionnaires and analytical games were used to obtain information on the type, scope and extent of use of pesticides, farmers' knowledge of pesticides, and their perceptions about the chemicals' potential for harm. Data from this sample of farmers were used to describe the status of use of pesticides in vegetable cultivation in Ghana. Using chi2 tests, associations between farmers' age and possible pesticide poisoning symptoms, their farm size and method of spraying pesticides, and their perception of pesticide hazard and its perceived effectiveness against pests were also examined. The survey showed that knapsack sprayers were the most widely used type of equipment for spraying pesticides. However, on large-scale vegetable farms of 6-10 acres, motorised sprayers were also used. Various inappropriate practices in the handling and use of pesticides caused possible poisoning symptoms among those farmers who generally did not wear protective clothing. Younger farmers (<45 years of age) were the most vulnerable group, probably because they did more spraying than older farmers (>45 years of age). Farmers did not necessarily associate hazardous pesticides with better pest control. The introduction of well-targeted training programmes for farmers on the need for and safe use of pesticides is advocated. SN - 1526-498X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/16532443/Farmer_perceptions_and_pesticide_use_practices_in_vegetable_production_in_Ghana_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -