| Literature DB >> 29450102 |
Jose Wilches-Gutierrez1, Patricia Documet1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) has experienced an unprecedented mining boom since the mid-2000s with unknown effects on sexual and reproductive health (SRH). This study takes the essential first steps of summarizing the available literature regarding SRH in mining contexts in LAC, identifying critical gaps in knowledge, and discussing main implications for future research.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; Latin America; Mining industry; Reproductive health; Sexual health
Year: 2018 PMID: 29450102 PMCID: PMC5809854 DOI: 10.1186/s40985-017-0078-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Rev ISSN: 0301-0422
Fig. 1Scoping review selection process
General characteristics and main findings of studies addressing SRH in LAC mining contexts
| Authors (year) | Country, sub-region | Mining features | Aims | Population ( | Main SRH findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Santos et al. (1995) [ | Brazil, Pará (AR) | Gold | Describe general health conditions in a (mining) community | General population | Hep B prevalence = 85%. Syphilis prevalence = 41.6% (males, 33%; females, 9%); the highest among miners (48%) and sex workers (38%). |
| Souto et al. (1998) [ | Brazil, Mato Grosso (AR) | Golda | Determine the prevalence and risk factors of Hep B virus among immigrants | General population | Hep B prevalence = 54.7%. Significant association between HBV markers and having lived in a gold-mining camp. |
| Faas et al. (1999) [ | Venezuela, Bolívar (AR) | Gold | Determine the prevalence of HIV/STDs and implement prevention workshops | General population | HIV prevalence = 1%. Syphilis prevalence = 16.6%; highest among female sex workers (29.5%) and health care workers (21.7%). History of STDs = 19.6%. |
| González and Rodríguez-Acosta (2000) [ | Venezuela, Bolívar (AR) | Golda | Determine the prevalence of STDs, among other health conditions | Attendants to a local health service ( | Prevalence of syphilis = 6%; gonorrhea = 4.8%; and HIV = 0%. History of STDs = 27.7%. |
| Souto et al. (2001) [ | Brazil, Mato Grosso (AR) | Golda | Determine the prevalence and risk factors of Hep B and C (and HBV subtypes) | Population of mine camps ( | Prevalence of Hep B = 82.9% and Hep C = 2.1%. HBsAg positivity was significantly associated with previous STDs. |
| Palmer et al. (2002) [ | Guyana (AR) | Gold | Determine the prevalence of HIV | Mineworkers—mostly males ( | HIV prevalence = 6.5%. |
| Seguy et al. (2008) [ | Guyana, three regions (AR) | Gold and diamondsa | Determine the prevalence of HIV and syphilis | Male mineworkers ( | Prevalence of HIV = 3.9% and syphilis = 6.4%. Knowledge on HIV = 75%, having had casual sex in the last year = 54%, and having had sex with sex workers = 14.8%. HIV was significantly associated with history of syphilis and not having used condom with last casual sex partner. |
| Miranda et al. (2009) [ | Brazil, Pará (AR) | Gold | Describe the reproductive profile of and prevalence of STDs among women living in a former mining village | Women attending to a local health facility ( | Prevalence of HIV = 1.9%, gonorrhea = 2.4%, and HPV = 3.8%. History of previous STDs = 11%, having been involved in prostitution = 15.8%, domestic violence reported = 17.7%, having been raped = 10%, and having had an abortion = 29.2%. |
| Astete et al. (2010) [ | Peru, Apurimac | Gold, silver, copper, iron Industrial/formal | Determine the prevalence of infectious diseases, mental health, and environmental pollution in a community surrounding an upcoming mining project | General population | No cases of HIV and Hep C or D. Prevalence of syphilis = 1.4% (similar to the national) and Hep B = 7.1% (lower than the national). |
| Orellana et al. (2013) [ | Peru, three departments (AR) | Gold | Examine structural factors related to the increased HIV/STD vulnerability among indigenous people | Indigenous population | Complex interactions between structural factors characterize Amazon rivers in Peru as risk environments for the HIV/STDs spread among indigenous communities. |
| Castro-Arroyave et al. (2016) [ | Colombia, Antioquia | Gold | Implement a CBPR intervention of HIV prevention and measure the prevalence of HIV | Community leaders ( | No cases of HIV. Prevalence of syphilis = 2.2%. Lack of knowledge, false beliefs, and stigma regarding HIV were identified. Participants increased their knowledge and changed perceptions about HIV issues. |
AR Amazon Region, ASM artisanal and small-scale mining, CBPR community-based participatory research, Hep hepatitis
aScale and/or formality status not mentioned