Kramer Desre M, Holness D Linn, Haynes Emily, McMillan Keith, Berriault Colin, Kalenge Sheila, Lightfoot Nancy
Occupational Cancer Research Centre, Cancer Care Ontario, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Centre of Research Expertise for Occupational Disease, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Work. 2017;58(2):149-162. doi: 10.3233/WOR-172610.
Miners work in highly hazardous environments, but surprisingly, there are more fatalities from occupational diseases, including cancers, than from fatalities from injuries. Over the last few decades, the mining environment has become safer with fewer injuries and less exposure to the toxins that lead to occupational disease. There have been improvements in working conditions, and a reduction in the number of workers exposed, together with an overall improvement in the health of miners.
This study attempted to gain a deeper understanding of the impetus for change to reduce occupational exposures or toxins at the industry level. It focuses on one mining community in Sudbury, Ontario, with a high cancer rate, and its reduction in occupational exposures. It explored the level of awareness of occupational exposures from the perspective of industry and worker representatives in some of the deepest mines in the world. Although awareness may be necessary, it is often not a sufficient impetus for change, and it is this gap between awareness and change that this study explored. It examined the awareness of occupational disease as an impetus to reducing toxic exposures in the mining sector, and explores other forces of change at the industrial and global levels that have led to an impact on occupational exposures in mining.
From 2014 and 2016, 60 interviews were conducted with individuals who were part of, or witness to the changes in mining in Sudbury. From these, 12 labour and 10 industry interviews and four focus groups were chosen for further analysis to gain a deeper understanding of industry and labour's views on the changes in mining and the impact on miners' health from occupational exposures. The results from this subsection of the data is the focus for this paper.
The themes that emerged told a story about Sudbury. There is awareness of occupational exposures, but this awareness is dwarfed in comparison to the attention that is given to the tragic fatal injuries from injuries and accidents. The mines are now owned by foreign multinationals with a change from an engaged, albeit paternalistic sense of responsibility for the health of the miners, to a less responsive or sympathetic workplace culture. Modernization has led to the elimination, substitution, or reduction of some of the worst toxins, and hence present-day miners are less exposed to hazards that lead to occupational disease than they were in the past. However, modernization and the drop in the price of nickel has also led to a precipitous reduction in the number of unionized miners, a decline in union power, a decline in the monitoring of present-day exposures, and an increase in non-unionized contract workers. The impact has been that miners have lost their solidarity and power to investigate, monitor or object to present-day exposures.
Although an increase in the awareness of occupational hazards has made a contribution to the reduction in occupational exposures, the improvement in health of miners may be considered more as a "collateral benefit" of the changes in the mining sector. Multiple forces at the industrial and global level have differentially led to an improvement in the working and living environment. However, with the loss of union power, the miners have lost their major advocate for miner health.
矿工在高度危险的环境中工作,但令人惊讶的是,职业病(包括癌症)导致的死亡人数超过了工伤死亡人数。在过去几十年里,采矿环境变得更加安全,工伤减少,接触导致职业病的毒素也减少。工作条件得到了改善,接触毒素的工人数量减少,矿工的整体健康状况也有所改善。
本研究试图更深入地了解行业层面减少职业接触或毒素的变革动力。它聚焦于安大略省萨德伯里的一个癌症发病率高的采矿社区及其职业接触的减少情况。它从世界上一些最深矿井的行业和工人代表的角度探讨了职业接触的认知水平。虽然认知可能是必要的,但它往往不是变革的充分动力,本研究探讨的正是这种认知与变革之间的差距。它考察了将职业病认知作为减少采矿业有毒物质接触的动力,并探讨了在工业和全球层面导致采矿业职业接触受到影响的其他变革力量。
2014年至2016年期间,对萨德伯里采矿变革的参与者或见证者进行了60次访谈。从中选取了12次劳工访谈、10次行业访谈和4个焦点小组进行进一步分析,以更深入地了解行业和劳工对采矿变革以及职业接触对矿工健康影响的看法。本论文重点关注这部分数据的结果。
出现的主题讲述了萨德伯里的故事。人们对职业接触有一定认知,但与对工伤和事故造成的悲惨致命伤害的关注相比,这种认知显得微不足道。这些矿井现在归外国跨国公司所有,工作场所文化从对矿工健康有一种尽管家长式但积极负责的态度,转变为反应迟钝或缺乏同情心。现代化导致一些最危险的毒素被消除、替代或减少,因此如今的矿工比过去接触导致职业病的危害更少。然而,现代化和镍价下跌也导致工会化矿工数量急剧减少、工会权力下降、当前接触情况的监测减少以及非工会合同制工人增加。其影响是矿工失去了团结以及调查、监测或反对当前接触情况的权力。
虽然职业危害认知的提高对减少职业接触有一定作用,但矿工健康状况的改善可能更多地被视为采矿业变革的“附带好处”。工业和全球层面的多种力量不同程度地导致了工作和生活环境的改善。然而,随着工会权力的丧失,矿工失去了维护自身健康的主要倡导者。