Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Kreuzstrasse 2, Allschwil, 4123, Switzerland.
University of Basel, P.O. Box, CH-4003, Basel, Switzerland.
Global Health. 2022 Jan 31;18(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s12992-022-00797-6.
The African continent hosts many industrial mining projects, and many more are planned due to recent prospecting discoveries and increasing demand for various minerals to promote a low-carbon future. The extraction of natural resources in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) represents an opportunity for economic development but also poses a threat to population health through rapid urbanisation and environmental degradation. Children could benefit from improved economic growth through various channels such as access to high-quality food, better sanitation, and clean water. However, mining can increase food insecurity and trigger local competition over safe drinking water. Child health can be threatened by exposure to mining-related air, noise, and water pollution. To assess the impact of mines on child health, we analyse socio-demographic, health, and mining data before and after several mining projects were commissioned in SSA.
Data of 90,951 children living around 81 mining sites in 23 countries in SSA were analysed for child mortality indicators, and 79,962 children from 59 mining areas in 18 SSA countries were analysed for diarrhoea, cough, and anthropometric indicators. No effects of the launch of new mining projects on overall under-five mortality were found (adjusted Odds Ratio (aOR): 0.88; 95% Confidence Interval (CI): 0.68-1.14). However, activation of mining projects reduced the mortality risk among neonates (0-30 days) by 45% (aOR: 0.55; 95% CI: 0.37-0.83) and risk for a child to develop diarrhoeal diseases by 32% (aOR: 0.68; 95% CI: 0,51-0.90). The timing analysis of observed changes showed that there is a significant decline in the risk for childhood diarrhoea (aOR: 0.69; 95% CI: 0.49-0.97), and the mean height-for-age z-scores by 28 percentage points, during the prospection and construction phase; i.e., within four years to the initiation of extraction activity. No effects were found for cough and weight-for-height.
The results presented suggest that the impacts of mining on child health vary throughout the mine's life cycle. Mining development likely contributes positively to the income and livelihoods of the impacted communities in the initial years of mining operations, particularly the prospection and construction phase; these potential benefits are likely to be at least partially offset by food insecurity and environmental pollution during early and later mining stages, respectively. Further research is warranted to better understand these health impacts and to identify policies that can help sustain the positive initial health impacts of mining projects in the long term.
非洲大陆拥有许多工业采矿项目,并且由于最近的勘探发现和对各种促进低碳未来的矿产的需求增加,计划了更多的项目。撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)的自然资源开采代表了经济发展的机会,但也因快速城市化和环境退化而对人口健康构成威胁。儿童可以通过各种途径从经济增长中受益,例如获得高质量的食物、更好的卫生设施和清洁水。然而,采矿业可能会加剧粮食不安全,并引发对安全饮用水的当地竞争。儿童可能会因接触与采矿相关的空气、噪音和水污染而健康受到威胁。为了评估矿山对儿童健康的影响,我们分析了 SSA 中 23 个国家的 81 个矿区前后的社会人口统计学、健康和采矿数据。
对 SSA 中 23 个国家的 81 个矿区周围的 90951 名儿童的儿童死亡率指标和 18 个 SSA 国家的 59 个矿区的 79962 名儿童的腹泻、咳嗽和人体测量指标进行了数据分析。新采矿项目的启动并未发现对五岁以下儿童总死亡率的影响(调整后的优势比(aOR):0.88;95%置信区间(CI):0.68-1.14)。然而,采矿项目的启动降低了新生儿(0-30 天)的死亡率风险 45%(aOR:0.55;95%CI:0.37-0.83),并降低了儿童患腹泻病的风险 32%(aOR:0.68;95%CI:0.51-0.90)。观察到的变化的时间分析表明,在勘探和建设阶段,儿童腹泻的风险显著降低(aOR:0.69;95%CI:0.49-0.97),身高年龄 z 分数平均降低 28 个百分点;即,在开采活动开始前的四年内。未发现咳嗽和身高体重比的变化。
目前的研究结果表明,采矿对儿童健康的影响在矿山的整个生命周期中各不相同。在采矿作业的初始几年中,采矿的发展可能会对受影响社区的收入和生计产生积极影响,尤其是在勘探和建设阶段;在早期和后期的采矿阶段,这些潜在的好处可能会分别因粮食不安全和环境污染而至少部分抵消。需要进一步研究以更好地了解这些健康影响,并确定可以帮助长期维持采矿项目的积极初始健康影响的政策。