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Casper Bendixsen

Casper Bendixsen, PhD, serves as the Director and Associate Research Scientist at the National Farm Medicine Center since November 2013, specializing in cultural anthropology with a focus on the cultural values and ethics of U.S. ranchers. With a robust academic background that includes a Ph.D. and an M.A. in Cultural Anthropology from Rice University, Casper also has extensive practical experience, having worked as a wrangler, horse trainer, and ranch hand at X Lazy J Ranch for over a decade. Additionally, Casper contributed to community safety as a resident firefighter and EMT with the Moscow Fire Department. Educational qualifications include a Bachelor of Science in Anthropology and a Bachelor of Science in Philosophy from the University of Idaho.

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National Farm Medicine Center

The National Farm Medicine Center (NFMC) was established in 1981 in response to occupational health problems seen in farm patients coming to Marshfield Clinic. The center continues to focus its research and outreach on rural populations, especially the agricultural sector, which is one of the most hazardous industries in the United States. Farm Medicine is part of Marshfield Clinic Research Institute and a collaborator in the Upper Midwest Agricultural Safety and Health Center. Since 1997, the National Farm Medicine Center has been home to the National Children’s Center for Rural and Agricultural Health and Safety (NCCRAHS), one of 12 agricultural centers funded by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The National Children’s Center strives to enhance public-private partnerships in order to improve childhood agricultural injury prevention. Current Farm Medicine priorities include preventing injuries and fatalities, injury surveillance, community outreach and education, farm microbiome and human immunology, and evaluation research. Farm Medicine scientists and staff address these issues with special expertise in injury prevention, public health, bioinformatics, nursing, sociology, anthropology, education and communications. Farm Medicine also houses the editorial offices of the Journal of Agromedicine. The journal is the world’s No. 1 source of peer-reviewed agricultural safety and health information. Farm Medicine is a charter member of the Agricultural Safety and Health Council of America (ASHCA), a national collaborative effort of agricultural producers, NIOSH and researchers to improve translational research in agricultural safety and health. Farm Medicine leverages all these assets to help secure the success of every kind of farm.


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