Title
A cross-sectional study on the environmental culture and occupational health of informal waste pickers in Lima, Peru
Other title
Estudio transversal de la cultura ambiental y la salud ocupacional de recicladores informales de Lima, Perú
Date Issued
06 July 2020
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Medwave Estudios Ltda
Abstract
Purpose: To determine the level of environmental culture of the informal sector waste pickers and compliance with occupational health standards of informal waste pickers. Specific objectives: to explore the relationship between the level of environmental culture and compliance with occupational health standards: exposure to physical, chemical, biological, and ergonomic agents in informal waste pickers in 2019. Methods: Quantitative, correlational, cross-sectional, and non-experimental study. A sample of 400 informal waste pickers participated. Two questionnaires were applied: environmental culture and occupational health standards. Results: There is a medium positive and weak positive relationship between the environmental culture variable and the different agents (physical, chemical, biological, and ergonomic). There is a significant positive correlation between environmental culture and occupational health. Likewise, there is a weak positive significant correlation between environmental culture and agents (physical, chemical, biological, and ergonomic), and a significant positive correlation between environmental culture and the social responsibility agent. Conclusions: Informal waste pickers do not have their basic needs and rights met. A lack of occupational health safety characterizes informal recycling, so it is necessary to create formal and safe work environments with health promotion and prevention practices.
Start page
e7952
Volume
20
Issue
6
Language
Spanish
OCDE Knowledge area
Salud ocupacional
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85088215273
PubMed ID
Source
Medwave
ISSN of the container
07176384
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus