Clothing affords harvesters considerable protection against the elements an
d can retain substantial amounts of pesticide residue from treated crops. N
ormal work clothing of female harvesters was supplemented with rubber latex
gloves and facial scarves to determine whether those measures reduced expo
sure. Captan fungicide exposures in female strawberry harvesters were asses
sed by determining urine clearance rates of tetrahydrophalimide (THPI). Cle
an rubber gloves were supplied to the 41 harvesters for the 3 days of the s
tudy period in October 1995. The workers were divided into two groups consi
sting of either bare-handed or gloved workers, and 24-h urine specimens wer
e collected each day. Female harvesters who worked bare-handed cleared 5.3
mu g captan equivalents as THPI with a range of 0.4 to 13.8 mu g/person/day
. Harvesters who worked wearing rubber latex gloves cleared only 2.0 mu g c
aptan equivalents with a range of 0.9 to 4.3 mu g/person/day. In this case
clean rubber latex gloves reduced absorbed dose by 38%, compared to the dos
e absorbed by bare-handed workers. These results additionally indicate that
when a pesticide is avidly retained by rubber latex gloves and not readily
absorbed dermally as captan, estimates of absorbed dose based on passive d
osimetry data may be less reliable than exposure estimates derived from uri
ne biomonitoring.