Australian Defence Force Infectious Disease and Malaria Institute, Enoggera, Australia.
University of Queensland, School of Public Health, Brisbane, Australia.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2021 Nov 29;106(1):33-37. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.21-0747.
Tropical alluvial gold and gem miners are often an especially at-risk population for malaria infection. Geographical areas of mining-associated malaria epidemics in the recent past include Southeast Asia (Cambodia, Thailand, and Myanmar); the Amazon basin (Brazil, French Guyana, Suriname, Columbia, and Peru); and tropical Africa. Mobile populations of young adult men engaged in the hard labor of mining may experience severe malaria especially if they lack preexisting immunity and are irregularly consuming antimalarial drugs. Particular problems occur because much of this informal mining activity is illegal and done in isolated areas without access to health services and with evidence of emerging antimalarial drug resistance. Concentrating vulnerable populations in an ecologically disturbed landscape is often conducive to epidemics, which can then spread as these highly mobile workers return to their homes. Mining-associated malaria endangers malaria elimination efforts and miners need to be addressed as a group of particular concern.
冲积金矿和宝石矿工往往是疟疾感染的高危人群。在过去,与采矿相关的疟疾流行的地理区域包括东南亚(柬埔寨、泰国和缅甸)、亚马逊盆地(巴西、法属圭亚那、苏里南、哥伦比亚和秘鲁)和热带非洲。从事采矿重体力劳动的年轻成年男性流动人口可能会经历严重的疟疾,特别是如果他们缺乏预先存在的免疫力,并且不规则地服用抗疟药物。由于这种非正规采矿活动大多是非法的,而且是在没有获得卫生服务的孤立地区进行的,并且出现了抗疟药物耐药性的证据,因此出现了特殊的问题。将脆弱人群集中在生态受到干扰的景观中,往往有利于流行病的传播,而这些流动性很强的工人在返回家园时,流行病就会传播。与采矿相关的疟疾危及疟疾消除工作,需要将矿工作为一个特别关注的群体来处理。