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United States Environmental Protection Agency
Pesticides: Health and Safety
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Using Pesticides Safely

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This page is oriented toward people who use pesticides in or around their homes. If you job involves pesticides or may result in pesticide exposure (for example, you harvest crops in a field where pesticides were used), please see the Worker Safety and Training page.

Safely using pesticides depends on using the appropriate pesticide and using it correctly. The label on the pesticide container provides instructions for use of the pesticide. It also includes warnings that are intended to let the user know how to prevent harmful exposures, such as by wearing protective clothing, keeping children and pets out of the treated area for certain periods, and so on. It is very important to Read the Label First before using a pesticide.

EPA has several publications that provide more information about safe pesticide use:

Documents marked as (PDF) are formatted in Adobe Acrobat's Portable Document Format. Free Acrobat Reader software is available to enable you to read these files.

Mosquitoes, biting flies, and ticks can be annoying and sometimes pose a serious risk to public health. In certain areas of the U.S., mosquitos can transmit diseases like equine and St. Louis encephalitis. Biting flies can inflict a painful bite that can persist for days, swell, and become infected. Ticks can transmit serious diseases like Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever. When properly housed, insect repellents can discourage biting insects from landing on treated skin or clothing.

 

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