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    Invisible no more: The impact of COVID-19 on essential food production workers

    Creighton Authors
    Dineen, Kelly K.

    Admin. Units
    School of Law

    Subjects
    COVID-19 (Disease); Packing-houses; Agricultural laborers; Ethics; Human rights

    Title
    Invisible no more: The impact of COVID-19 on essential food production workers

    Authors
    Ramos, Athena K.; Lowe, Abigail E.; Herstein, Jocelyn J.; Schwedhelm, Shelly; Dineen, Kelly K.; Lowe, John J.

    Journal
    Journal of Agromedicine

    Volume
    25

    Pages
    378-382

    Date
    2020

    Metadata
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    Link
    Check for Full-Text (may not be available)

    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10504/128512
    Citation
    Athena K. Ramos, Abigail E. Lowe, Jocelyn J. Herstein, Shelly Schwedhelm, Kelly K. Dineen & John J. Lowe, Invisible No More: The Impact of COVID-19 on Essential Food Production Workers, 25 J. AGROMEDICINE 378 (2020).

    Abstract
    From the farms to the packing plants, essential workers in critical food production industries keep food on our tables while risking their and their families’ health and well-being to bring home a paycheck. They work in essential industries but are often invisible. The disparities illuminated by COVID-19 are not new. Instead, they are the result of years of inequities built into practices, policies, and systems that reinforce societal power structures. As a society, we are now at an antagonizing moment where we can change our collective trajectory to focus forward and promote equity and justice for workers in agriculture and food-related industries. To that end, we describe our experience and approach in addressing COVID-19 outbreaks in meat processing facilities, which included three pillars of action based on public health ethics and international human rights: (1) worksite prevention and control, (2) community-based prevention and control, and (3) treatment. Our approach can be translated to promote the health, safety, and well-being of the broader agricultural workforce.
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