However, two European countries were included in the 2006 survey and 12.2% of
their combined users reported an incident requiring medical treatment in the last 12 months which is a higher figure than reported by any country in the 2005 survey. Indian users were surveyed in both years, but the regions surveyed were different. Although a higher proportion of Indian users reported minor incidents in 2006 than 2005 (31.3 vs. 18.9%), a lower proportion reported an incident requiring medical treatment in 2006 than 2005 (7.7 vs. 11.6%). Another limitation of the survey was incomplete information on the identity of pesticides that the users thought had caused CP673451 their health problems. It is unsurprising that some users could not identify the pesticides that they were using when incidents occurred because of the complex tank SBE-��-CD price mixtures used and decanting after purchase (although this practice was not common). However, almost 2/3 of users that had experienced an agrochemical-related incident in the last 12 months listed at least one product that had had an
adverse effect on their personal health. Surprisingly, the proportion of users that were able to identify a product that had had an adverse effect on their health was slightly lower for those who reported a serious or moderate severity incident (57%, n = 256) than for users who reported a minor incident (65%, n = 825). However, LY411575 purchase this was largely due to the fact that many of the minor incidents were reported by users in Tanzania and Cameroon where very high proportions of users who reported health problems were able to identify the products that they felt Oxalosuccinic acid had caused health problems (98 and 92%, respectively). The use of complex tank mixtures may have resulted in over-reporting of the numbers of incidents as some users reported the same numbers of incidents in all severity categories for more than one product. In some cases, the numbers of incidents were
sufficiently unusual to suggest that the user had not been able to identify the product that they thought was responsible. Caution is also required when comparing the results between countries in this survey because the wide variations in the frequencies of agrochemical health incidents of different severities will also reflect different cultural attitudes towards the symptoms and the pesticides themselves. Other explanatory factors include the availability and cost of treatment and the types of pesticides being used. Evidence of other cultural influences is provided by users from Bangladesh who were much more likely to list fatigue as a symptom than users from other countries (80% of product mentions made by Bangladeshi users listed fatigue as a symptom compared to only 14% of product mentions by other users).