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Blogger: Vallerye Mosquera

Double Invisibility: Forgotten in the Fields and at Home

There are many heat stress prevention strategies for farmworkers that focus on correcting either individual behaviors (e.g., avoiding caffeinated beverages and bulky sweatshirts) or workplace conditions (e.g., providing shade and regular break periods). Yet, few heat stress-specific health plans take into consideration the conditions of the built and natural environment that farmworkers are returning to at the end of a long day in the fields.

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Vallerye Mosquera
Vallerye Mosquera
Vallerye Mosquera is a master’s student in Community and Regional Development at UC Davis. At UCD, she has served as a graduate student researcher for a study of immigrant and refugee serving organizations in the Sacramento region. She is also a part-time Bilingual Sexual Assault Victim Advocate for the Sexual Assault Domestic Violence Center in Yolo County. Prior to attending UC Davis, her work experience included outreach and environmental advocacy to Spanish-speaking communities in the United States and Latin America. Between 2005 and 2006, Vallerye earned a Bachelor’s degree in biology from the New College of Florida which led to a Fulbright research scholarship in Quito, Ecuador where she was responsible for evaluating social and environmental policies related to solid waste disposal. Mrs. Mosquera is fluent in Spanish and Portuguese.

Double Invisibility: Forgotten in the Fields and at Home

Saturday, 24 March 2012 Posted by Vallerye Mosquera Category Farm Labor 0 comment

 

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There are many heat stress prevention strategies for farmworkers that focus on correcting either individual behaviors (e.g., avoiding caffeinated beverages and bulky sweatshirts) or workplace conditions (e.g., providing shade and regular break periods). Yet, few heat stress-specific health plans take into consideration the conditions of the built and natural environment that farmworkers are returning to at the end of a long day in the fields.

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Tags: Rural Housing Policy, Community Assessment Tools, Heat Illness Prevention, Rural Policy, Heat Exposure, Farmworker Housing, Social Justice, Farmworker Health, Rural Development, Rural California, Community Development, Central Valley, Agricultural Labor

Conversations en Casa

Saturday, 07 January 2012 Posted by Vallerye Mosquera Category Rural Health 0 comment

Farmworker Interviews Reveal Heat Stress Illness

Risk Factors at Home

With funding from University of California Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program, researchers at UC Davis and the California Institute for Rural Studies (CIRS) recently partnered with the Organizacion de Trabajadores Agricolas de California (OTAC) to conduct interviews with farmworkers in the Stockton area. We hoped to learn more about the off-farm environmental factors that could contribute to the risk for heat stress illness among farmworkers. The interview results will assist the research team in identifying household and community factors that may contribute to heat stress illness in farmworker communities. 

 

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Tags: Heat Illness Prevention, Farmworker Health, Community Assessment Tools

Farmworkers at Risk, Even at Home

Friday, 09 December 2011 Posted by Vallerye Mosquera Category Farm Labor 0 comment

By Gail Wadsworth and Vallerye Mosquera

With funding from University of California Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program, CIRS is partnering with Dr. Michael Rios and Vallerye Mosquera from UC, Davis, and Luis Magaña from the Organizacion de Trabajadores Agricolas de California, to complete a community-based risk assessment tool for heat stress.  This tool is unique in that it is focusing on the risk of heat stress to farmworkers within their communities.  In other words:  off the farm.

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Tags: Labor Conditions, UC Davis, Social Justice, Agriculture, Rural Health, Farm Labor, Agricultural Labor, Farmworker Health, Rural Studies, Rural California, Heat Exhaustion, Heat Exposure, Central Valley

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