Mamuya Simon H D, Bråtveit Magne, Mashalla Yohana, Moen Bente E
Centre for International Health, University of Bergen, Norway.
BMC Public Health. 2007 Feb 1;7:17. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-7-17.
Few studies of miners have been carried out in African countries; most are from South Africa, where the working conditions are assumed to be better than in the rest of Africa. Several studies have focused on respiratory disorders among miners, but development workers responsible for creating underground road ways have not been studied explicitly. This is the first study assessing the associations between exposure to dust and quartz and respiratory symptoms among coal mine workers in a manually operated coal mine in Tanzania, focusing on development workers, as they have the highest exposure to coal dust.
A cross-sectional study was carried out among 250 production workers from a coal mine. Interviews were performed using modified standardized questionnaires to elicit information on occupational history, demographics, smoking habits and acute and chronic respiratory symptoms. The relationships between current dust exposure as well as cumulative respirable dust and quartz and symptoms were studied by group comparisons as well as logistic regression.
Workers from the development group had the highest dust exposure, with arithmetic mean of 10.3 mg/m3 for current respirable dust and 1.268 mg/m3 for quartz. Analogous exposure results for mine workers were 0.66 mg/m3 and 0.03 mg/m3, respectively; and for other development workers were 0.88 mg/m3 and 0.10 mg/m3, respectively. The workers from the development section had significantly higher prevalence of the acute symptoms of dry cough (45.7%), breathlessness (34.8%) and blocked nose (23.9%). In addition, development workers had significantly more chronic symptoms of breathlessness (17.0%) than the mine workers (6.4%) and the other production workers (2.4%). The highest decile of cumulative exposure to respirable dust was significantly associated with cough (OR = 2.91, 95% CI 1.06, 7.97) as were cumulative exposure to quartz and cough (OR = 2.87, CI 1.05, 7.88), compared with the reference consisting of the group of workers with the lowest quartile of the respective cumulative exposure.
The development workers in a coal mine had more acute and chronic respiratory symptoms than the mine and the other production workers. In addition, there was an association between high cumulative coal dust and respiratory symptoms.
在非洲国家,针对矿工的研究较少;大多数研究来自南非,那里的工作条件被认为比非洲其他地区更好。有几项研究聚焦于矿工中的呼吸系统疾病,但负责开凿地下巷道的开拓工人尚未得到明确研究。这是第一项评估坦桑尼亚一座手工煤矿中煤矿工人接触粉尘和石英与呼吸道症状之间关联的研究,重点关注开拓工人,因为他们接触煤尘的程度最高。
对来自一座煤矿的250名生产工人开展了一项横断面研究。使用经过修改的标准化问卷进行访谈,以获取有关职业史、人口统计学、吸烟习惯以及急性和慢性呼吸道症状的信息。通过组间比较以及逻辑回归研究当前粉尘接触以及累积可吸入粉尘和石英与症状之间的关系。
开拓组工人的粉尘接触程度最高,当前可吸入粉尘算术平均值为10.3毫克/立方米,石英为1.268毫克/立方米。煤矿工人的类似接触结果分别为0.66毫克/立方米和0.03毫克/立方米;其他开拓工人的分别为0.88毫克/立方米和0.10毫克/立方米。开拓组工人干咳(45.7%)、呼吸急促(34.8%)和鼻塞(23.9%)等急性症状的患病率显著更高。此外,开拓工人呼吸急促的慢性症状(17.0%)明显多于煤矿工人(6.4%)和其他生产工人(2.4%)。与各自累积接触量最低四分位数的工人组作为对照相比,累积可吸入粉尘接触量最高十分位数与咳嗽显著相关(比值比=2.91,95%置信区间1.06,7.97),累积接触石英与咳嗽也显著相关(比值比=2.87,置信区间1.05,7.88)。
煤矿中的开拓工人比煤矿工人和其他生产工人有更多的急性和慢性呼吸道症状。此外,高累积煤尘与呼吸道症状之间存在关联。