This qualitative study utilized focus groups to invite Latino migrant farm workers to express ideas about their health and service needs. Four focus groups composed of Latino men and women were conducted on four different evenings in the same county. Three themes emerged: health care issues, living and working conditions, and social and community issues. Specific needs of the community were also identified by the participants. For the first time, migrant farm workers in Georgia had the opportunity to lend their own voice regarding their concerns and ideas about health and social conditions. The findings from this study are congruent with other studies and provide the basis for developing interventions to enhance the health of migrant farm workers. In addition, the findings have implications for community health nursing and the proposed Vision of 2010: Healthy People in Healthy Communities, whose goals include increased years of healthy life and the elimination of health disparities.
Objectives. We evaluated the health status of migrant farmworkers’ children served by the Farm Worker Family Health Program (FWFHP) in Moultrie, Georgia. Methods. We analyzed data from children aged 0 to 16 years examined through the FWFHP from 2003 to 2011 (n across years = 179–415). We compared their prevalence of overweight, obesity, elevated blood pressure, anemia, and stunting with that of children in the United States and Mexico. Results. Across study years, prevalence of overweight, obesity, elevated blood pressure, anemia, and stunting ranged from 13.5% to 21.8%, 24.0% to 37.4%, 4.1% to 20.2%, 10.1% to 23.9%, and 1% to 6.4%, respectively. Children in the FWFHP had a higher prevalence of obesity than children in all comparison groups, and FWFHP children aged 6 to 12 years had a higher prevalence of elevated blood pressure than all comparison groups. Older FWFHP children had a higher prevalence of anemia than US children and Mexican children. Children in FWFHP had a higher prevalence of stunting than US and Mexican American children. Conclusions. We observed an elevated prevalence of obesity, anemia among older age groups, and stunting in this sample of children of migrant workers.
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