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Human exposure to banned pesticides reported to the French Poison Control Centers: 2012-2016

Authors :
S. Sinno-Tellier
Marie-Odile Rambourg
Juliette Bloch
Jérôme Langrand
Xavier Pineau
Denis Boucaud-Maitre
Martine Kammerer
E. Puskarczyk
Source :
Environmental toxicology and pharmacology. 69
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

In 2008, 30 active substances from plant protection products were banned from marketing in France. Nevertheless, the French Poison Control Centers continue to see cases of poisoning caused by these active substances that are no longer approved. The aim of this study was to describe the characteristics of the reported cases in mainland France and in overseas French territories, over the period 2012–2016. A total of 408 cases of human exposure were reported during the study period. The most commonly reported substances were dichlorvos (24.8%, n = 108), paraquat (23.8%, n = 97), aldicarb (14.7%, n = 60), diuron (9.6%, n = 39), dinocap (5.1%, n = 21), methomyl (4.2%, n = 17), carbofuran (3.9%, n = 16), anthraquinone (2.9%, n = 12) and carbendazim (2.7%, n = 11). The number of cases of intoxication dropped sharply between 2012 (n = 119) and 2016 (n = 47), except in the overseas French territories. Among the 72 serious cases (severe or life-threatening or with a fatal outcome), the most common substances involved were paraquat (n = 34), aldicarb (n = 24) and carbofuran (n = 7). This study suggests persistent use of carbamate insecticides, the existence of illegal imports of dichlorvos or paraquat-based products, and the use of certain banned fungicides in the professional agricultural sector. Information and collection campaigns are therefore essential after the withdrawal of marketing authorization for the plant protection products.

Details

ISSN :
18727077
Volume :
69
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental toxicology and pharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb50d32093a6b19c164fa6e146d044b7