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Despite extensive documentation and repeated reform efforts spanning more than a century, migrant farmworkers in the United States continue to face severe housing-related health inequities. Drawing on extensive archival research (1910-2024) and contemporary ethnographic fieldwork at labor camps on Maryland's Eastern Shore, we examine why interventions to improve farmworker housing conditions have consistently failed to create meaningful change and how different institutions have understood and responded to these conditions over time. Through systematic analysis of government documents, policy analyses, advocacy reports, media coverage, and ethnographic observations, we trace how housing conditions actively produce and maintain health inequities through their role in agricultural labor systems. Our findings reveal four recurring yet ineffective reform approaches: calls for improved standards, demands for enforcement, educational initiatives, and appeals for more research. We identify three structural factors that perpetuate these inequities: housing's function within racial capitalism, where spatial organization enables worker control and exploitation; the coordination between state policies and business interests through what we term the "Food Para-State," which systematically undermines reform efforts; and public health's role in accepting and furthering worker control, which normalizes inequities while expanding surveillance. The COVID-19 pandemic, during which agricultural workers faced infection rates four times higher than the general population, exemplifies how these structural factors transform housing conditions into mechanisms of health inequity. This analysis contributes to theories of structural determinants of health by demonstrating how housing conditions serve not merely as social determinants but as active mechanisms for producing and maintaining health inequities in agricultural labor.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2025.118488 | DOI Listing |
Cardiol Rev
September 2025
Departments of Cardiology and Medicine, Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY.
Heart failure (HF) remains one of the leading causes of 30-day hospital readmissions, presenting a major challenge to healthcare systems worldwide. This comprehensive review synthesizes recent evidence on effective strategies to reduce readmission rates through patient education, self-care interventions, and systemic reforms. Structured education-particularly when reinforced postdischarge through methods like teach-back, tele-coaching, and home visits-has consistently demonstrated improved self-management, symptom recognition, and quality of life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVet World
July 2025
Department of Animal Husbandry, Ruminant Animals and Animal Products Technologies, Faculty of Agriculture, Trakia University, 6000, Bulgaria.
Background And Aim: Rising global temperatures and increasing humidity levels are intensifying the risk of heat stress (HS) in high-yielding dairy cattle. The temperature-humidity index (THI) is a standard metric for evaluating thermal stress in livestock. This study aimed to assess seasonal and diurnal variations in temperature, relative humidity, and THI within a milking parlor and determine their compliance with established thermal comfort thresholds for dairy cows.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Aging Health
September 2025
Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA.
This study examined the association between perceived sleep quality and mental and cognitive health among older Korean Americans residing in subsidized senior housing. Survey data from 318 participants (Mean age = 79.5, SD = 6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste Manag Res
September 2025
Department of Economics, John Cabot University, Rome, Italy.
This research examines the impact of environmental (dis)amenities on residential rental values in the urban areas of Rawalpindi and Islamabad, Pakistan. Using a unique dataset of 849 households and geospatial data on 35 irregular dumpsites, we quantify how proximity to environmental disamenities depresses rental prices. Specifically, results confirm that irregular dumpsites significantly depress rental values, especially for properties situated near the closest distance rings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatr Serv
September 2025
Center for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Implementation, and Policy, Health Systems Research (HSR), U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles.
Veterans experiencing homelessness face barriers to traditional U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) care, even when temporarily housed on VA grounds.
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