WHAT IS NFWHW?

National Farmworker Women’s Health Week is a public awareness campaign aimed at increasing public consciousness and understanding of the health risks farmworker women face, and as an extension, their families from working in the fields. NFWHW will be celebrated from May 12-18, 2024.


NFWHW PURPOSE

  • Raise awareness about farmworker women’s amazing contributions to society while facing daily challenges due to inequity in access to health, wages, education, and more.
  • Raise awareness and provide education on the devastating health effects that farmworker women face due to pesticide exposure, especially during pregnancy. It may lead to miscarriages, preterm births, low birth weight, birth defects, and earning problems in children.

NFWHW GOAL

The goal is to raise awareness and create a lasting conversation about farmworker women’s health issues via social media, advocacy and training.


2024 NFWHW KEY MESSAGES:

  • Pesticide exposure can harm the health of farmworker women and their unborn children
  • Farmworker women play a vital role in the household and socioeconomic
  • Farmworker women deserve equality (Pay gap, healthcare-mental health, workplace harassment)

 GET INVOLVED!

  1. Sign up to become a partner HERE!
  2. Download the social media toolkit HERE! (Available May 8th, 2024)

3 WAYS TO GET INVOLVED

1. Share on social media our daily messages from our TOOLKIT Make sure to follow and tag us on social media at @afophealth (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram)

2.  Join the NFWHW campaign by using the SPEAK OUT SIGNS. Please Download and Print the signs, take a photo, post them on social media, and tag us.  Make sure to use the #NFWHW

3. Buy the NFWHW campaign merch and help us spread an important message BUY HERE!

SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLKIT

Toolkit will be available on May 8th, 2024

JOIN THE DISCUSSION ON INSTAGRAM!


SPEAK OUT SIGNS.
Download and Print the sign, take a photo, post it on social media, and tag us @afophealth
Make sure to use the #NFWHW

SUPPORT OUR WORK


Every donation made will go back to fighting
for farmworker women’s equality.

RESOURCES: