Esterhuizen T M, Hnizdo E, Rees D, Lalloo U G, Kielkowski D, van Schalkwyk E M, White N, Smith F C, Hoggins B, Curtis T
National Centre for Occupational Health, Department of Health, Johannesburg.
S Afr Med J. 2001 Jun;91(6):502-8.
To describe the nature and extent of work-related respiratory diseases reported to the national Surveillance of Work-related and Occupational Respiratory Diseases in South Africa (SORDSA) reporting scheme. The causative agents and industrial categories in which they occurred are also characterised.
Voluntary monthly reporting of newly diagnosed cases by pulmonologists, occupational medicine practitioners and occupational health nurses.
Medical and occupational health referral centres in the nine provinces of South Africa.
Cases were workers from non-mining industries or ex-miners, suffering from a newly diagnosed occupational respiratory disease, reported to SORDSA between October 1996 and December 1999.
Frequencies of reported occupational respiratory disease by year, reporting source, province and sex. Frequencies of short- and long-latency diseases by industry and causative agent.
There was incomplete reporting coverage of the nine provinces in the first 3 years. Reporting was most comprehensive from Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal and the Western Cape. Diseases with long latency periods made up 76.2% of the cases. Pneumoconiosis, even in non-mining industries, was the most frequently reported disease, followed by inhalation accidents. Occupational asthma was the fourth most reported disease. Apart from the prominence of pneumoconiosis, the results obtained by SORDSA are similar to those from a British occupational lung disease surveillance scheme. This study showed that newly diagnosed cases of occupational lung disease occurred in many industries and were caused by a variety of agents.
SORDSA has contributed insight into the nature, extent and distribution of occupational respiratory diseases in South Africa. It has also highlighted important causes of occupational respiratory diseases in South Africa, as well as hazardous industries. The data indicate that South Africa has a widespread occupational lung disease problem, and provide a platform for targeted prevention strategies.
描述向南非国家职业性和与工作相关的呼吸系统疾病监测(SORDSA)报告系统报告的与工作相关的呼吸系统疾病的性质和范围。同时对这些疾病的致病因素和发生的行业类别进行特征描述。
由肺科医生、职业医学从业者和职业健康护士每月自愿报告新诊断病例。
南非九个省的医疗和职业健康转诊中心。
病例为1996年10月至1999年12月期间向SORDSA报告的、患有新诊断职业性呼吸系统疾病的非采矿业工人或前矿工。
按年份、报告来源、省份和性别统计报告的职业性呼吸系统疾病的频率。按行业和致病因素统计短期和长期潜伏期疾病的频率。
前三年九个省的报告覆盖不完整。豪登省、夸祖鲁-纳塔尔省和西开普省的报告最为全面。潜伏期长的疾病占病例的76.2%。尘肺病即使在非采矿业也是报告最频繁的疾病,其次是吸入事故。职业性哮喘是报告第四多的疾病。除了尘肺病突出外,SORDSA获得的结果与英国职业性肺病监测计划的结果相似。这项研究表明,新诊断的职业性肺病病例发生在许多行业,由多种因素引起。
SORDSA有助于深入了解南非职业性呼吸系统疾病的性质、范围和分布。它还突出了南非职业性呼吸系统疾病的重要病因以及危险行业。数据表明南非存在广泛的职业性肺病问题,并为有针对性的预防策略提供了一个平台。