| Literature DB >> 23364097 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Crystalline silica and asbestos are common minerals that occur throughout South Africa, exposure to either causes respiratory disease. Most studies on silicosis in South Africa have been cross-sectional and long-term trends have not been reported. Although much research has been conducted on the health effects of silica dust and asbestos fibre in the gold-mining and asbestos-mining sectors, little is known about their health effects in other mining sectors.Entities:
Keywords: asbestos; autopsy; diamond; gold; migrant labour; miners; platinum; silica; silicosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23364097 PMCID: PMC3556678 DOI: 10.3402/gha.v6i0.19520
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Action ISSN: 1654-9880 Impact factor: 2.640
Summary of major findings from the thesis related publications
| Silicosis in gold miners ( | Oscillating migration ( | Asbestos-related diseases in diamond miners ( | Silicosis in platinum mine workers ( | Integrating narrative | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trends in silicosis in South African gold miners | The proportion of black miners diagnosed with silicosis increased from 3 to 33% from 1975 to 2007; in white miners it increased from 18 to 22%. | Health care costs were externalised away from the mining companies as a direct result of oscillating migration; this resulted in epidemics of diseases such as silicosis, tuberculosis, and HIV. | Increasing trends are due to the migrant labour system, poor dust control, an inadequate occupational exposure limit, and an ageing workforce with increasing durations of employment. | ||
| The potential for respiratory disease in under-researched mining sectors | Diamond mine workers are at risk of developing asbestos-related diseases due to the composition of the rock. | Platinum mine workers are at risk of exposure to crystalline silica and developing silicosis. | The PATHAUT database provides an opportunity for disease surveillance in miners of all commodities, including those in which risks of ill health are considered to be minimal. |
Studies of silicosis in South African gold miners, 1978–2009
| Authors | Study design | Study period | Study population | Study site | Sample size | Mean/range of employment (years) | Diagnostic tool | Proportion with silicosis | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White gold miners | |||||||||
| Irwig and Rocks 1978 ( | Cross-sectional | 1968 to 1971 | Employed white miners aged 45–54 | All areas | 1,973 | >10 | Chest X- rays | 6.8 | White miners only |
| Hnizdo and Sluis-Cremer 1993 ( | Cohort | 1968 to 1991 | White ex-miners – living and dead | All areas | 984 | 23.5 | Chest X- rays | 14.0 | White miners only |
| Murray and Hnizdo 2005 ( | Cohort | 1968 to 2003 | Deceased white gold miners | All areas | 1,476 | 23.5 | Autopsy | 51.6 | White miners only |
| Black gold miners | |||||||||
| Cowie and van Schalkwyk 1987 ( | Cross-sectional | 1984 | Employed black miners | Orange Free State, SA | 132,765 | Not stated | Chest X- rays | 1.4 | Black miners only; no ex-miners; denominator included new recruits |
| Murray et al. 1996 ( | Cross-sectional trend analysis | 1975 to 1991 | Deceased black gold miners | All areas | 16,454 | 4.4–6.9 | Autopsy | 9.3–12.8 | Black miners only; 62% of men employed for <5 years 78% younger than 40 |
| Steen et al. 1997 ( | Cross-sectional | 1994 | Living black ex-miners | Botswana | 304 | 15.5 | Chest X- rays | 26.6–31.0 | Black miners only; selection bias; no current miners |
| Trapido et al. 1998a ( | Cross-sectional | 1996 | Living black ex-miners | Eastern Cape, SA | 238 | 12.2 | Chest X- rays | 22.0– 36.0 | Black miners only; no current miners |
| Meel 2002 ( | Cross-sectional | 1997 to 1999 | Living black ex-miners – hospital patients | Eastern Cape, SA | 300 | Not stated | Chest X- rays | 34.0 | Black miners only; selection bias (hospital patients); no current miners |
| Girdler-Brown et al. 2008 ( | Cross-sectional | 1999 | Living black ex-miners | Lesotho | 624 | 25.6 | Chest X- rays | 24.6 | Black miners only; no current miners |
| Churchyard et al. 2004 ( | Cross-sectional | 2000 to 2001 | Employed black miners older than 37 | North West province, SA | 520 | 21.8 | Chest X- rays | 18.3– 19.9 | Black miners only; no ex-miners; healthy worker effect |
| Park et al. 2009 ( | Cohort | 1999 to 2000 | Living black ex-miners | Lesotho | 553 | 26.1 | Chest X- rays | 27.0 | Black miners only; no current miners; short follow-up of 1 year |
cross-sectional study design
small numbers.
insensitive diagnostic tool.
Fig. 1Map of South Africa showing geographical distribution of diamond and asbestos deposits [generated using ArcExplorer software (17)].
Fig. 2Map showing the platinum mines in the Bushveld Complex (19).
Fig. 3Crude population group-specific proportions of gold miners with silicosis, 1975–2007.