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Attitudes to Pest Control Study

Attitudes to Pest Control Study. Background. The study provides the consumer perspective of the “market,” covering product use, related attitudes, knowledge of government regulation, and assessment of the proposal to prevent the sale and use of pest and weed control products.

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Attitudes to Pest Control Study

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  1. Attitudes to Pest Control Study

  2. Background • The study provides the consumer perspective of the “market,” covering product use, related attitudes, knowledge of government regulation, and assessment of the proposal to prevent the sale and use of pest and weed control products. • The research was conducted by telephone with a nationally representative sample of 600 homeowners (those in condo apartments excluded), April 19-25, 2001. • The interview was completed with the individual who is responsible for decisions about pest and weed control. • Each homeowner was asked three of four sections (minimum 450 interviews for each section): pests in home; pests in lawn/garden; pests in trees/shrubs; weeds.

  3. Bottom Line / Three-Point Brief • Canadian homeowners are of two minds about their use of pest and weed control products. • They see merit in the products’ purpose and see the products as effective in accomplishing this purpose. • They also see potential risks to using the products which centre on safety to humans and the environment.

  4. Advantages and Disadvantages of Relevant Products

  5. Homeowners’ Perceptions of Pest Control Product Advantages (Unaided) Kills pests (net) Kills pests/eliminates (unspec) Kills/eliminates ants, rats, mice, etc. Controls pests (net) Controls pests/keeps them down Controls spread of disease Improves look of yard/better flowers and trees Easy to use/effective products/fast results Sanitary/cleaner living No advantages/don’t know

  6. Homeowners’ Perceptions of Pest Control Product Disadvantages (Unaided) Harmful/dangerous (net) Harmful to animals/people/children Product is toxic/poisonous Environment (net) Not environmentally friendly/ environmental hazards Water/air/soil pollution Pollution (unspec) Health related (net) Health hazards/risks (unspec) Risk of cancer/asthma/allergies Health hazards/risks to children/ animals/people Cost/expensive Dislike the smell/bad odour No disadvantages/don’t know

  7. Homeowners’ Perceptions of Plant Disease and Weed Control Product Advantages (Unaided) Appearance of yard (net) Improves look of yard/trees/flowers/grass Healthier plants/trees/flowers Kills (net) Kills weeds/eliminates Kills bugs/eliminates Controls (net) Controls weeds/stops spreading of weeds Controls (plant) diseases/stop spreading of diseases Easy to use/effective product/fast results Healthier crop/better yields No advantages/don’t know

  8. Homeowners’ Perceptions of Plant Disease and Weed Control Product Disadvantages (Unaided) Environment (net) Not environmentally friendly/environmental hazards Water/air/soil pollution Pollution (unspec) Harmful/dangerous (net) Harmful to children/animals/people Product is toxic/poisonous Health related (net) Health hazards/risk to children/animals/people Health hazards/risks (unspec) Risk of cancer/asthma/allergies Cost/too expensive Kills/burns grass and plants No disadvantages/don’t know

  9. Likely Response to Situation

  10. Homeowners’ Likely Response to Situation Purchase suitable product and use Hire a professional Try to eliminate or remove by hand Take no action, ignore

  11. Use of Relevant Products and Professional Services

  12. Use of Relevant Products in Past 2 Years among Homeowners Pests in home Pests in lawn/garden Pests in trees/shrubs Weeds

  13. Use of Professional Services in Past 2 Years among Homeowners Pests in home Pests in lawn/garden Pests in trees/shrubs Weeds

  14. Related Attitudes

  15. Homeowners’ Agreement with Statements About Pest and Weed Control Scale used: Strongly agree, somewhat agree, somewhat disagree, strongly disagree

  16. Overall Opinion among Homeowners on the Useof Relevant Products Necessary, safe if used properly Neutral/neither Hazardous, unnecessary

  17. Preference for Product Availability

  18. Homeowners’ Preference for Availability of Relevant Products at Retail Stores Available for purchase on the shelves Available behind the counter on request Not available at all

  19. Perceptions of Government Regulation

  20. Homeowners’ Perceptions of the Level and Adequacy of Government Regulation

  21. Support or Oppose Prohibiting Sale and Use of Pest and Weed Control Products Strongly support Somewhat support Neutral Somewhat oppose Strongly oppose

  22. Conclusions / Key Findings • Canadian homeowners are of two minds about their use of pest and weed control products. • They see merit in the products’ purpose and see the products as effective in accomplishing this purpose, which is both to control pests, plant diseases and weeds, and to enable homeowners to do so themselves. Another benefit is that these products further the pride homeowners take in their gardening efforts (and home). • On the other hand, homeowners also see disadvantages or potential risks to using these products. These perceived drawbacks include the products’ toxicity to humans and animals, and adverse environmental impact.

  23. Conclusions / Key Findings • Homeowners are likely to take action when faced with a pest, plant disease or weed situation (virtually all if they find pests in the home and 90% for the other situations). • Many see suitable products as the best approach. Purchasing a suitable product for do-it-yourself use is the most common first response to three of the four situations, while hiring a professional is the least likely reaction – aside from ignoring the issue – to all four. • Overall...homeowners acknowledge both benefits and drawbacks to these products, but are likely to use them when needed. This suggests they are considering the pros and cons, and consciously making the trade-off in favour of product use.

  24. Conclusions / Key Findings • With regard to access, homeowners clearly want to have the products available at retail (82%-85%). Access preferences are correlated with use of the products; users are more often in favour of shelf access while non-users are more likely to favour behind-the-counter access. • Most (73%-77%) either know these products to be regulated by the Federal government or feel confident in assuming such regulation exists. Most (63%-71%) also see the existing level of regulation as either adequate or more than adequate. • Homeowners are likely to have an opinion on the Federal government prohibiting the sale of these products (i.e., very few are neutral or undecided on the matter). Opposition to this proposal outweighs support for each of the four product categories, and is particularly strong for in-home pest control products.

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