MORTALITY AMONG DUST-EXPOSED CHINESE MINE AND POTTERY WORKERS

被引:65
|
作者
CHEN, JQ
MCLAUGHLIN, JK
ZHANG, JY
STONE, BJ
LUO, JM
CHEN, RA
DOSEMECI, M
REXING, SH
WU, Z
HEARL, FJ
MCCAWLEY, MA
BLOT, WJ
机构
[1] NCI,DIV CANC ETIOL,EPIDEMIOL & BIOSTAT PROGRAM,BETHESDA,MD 20892
[2] TONGJI MED UNIV,SCH PUBL HLTH,DEPT LABOR HLTH & OCCUPAT & OCCUPAT,WUHAN,PEOPLES R CHINA
[3] WESTAT CORP,ROCKVILLE,MD
[4] NIOSH,DIV RESP DIS STUDIES,MORGANTOWN,WV 26505
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00043764-199203000-00017
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
A cohort study of approximately 68,000 persons employed during 1972 to 1974 at metal mines and pottery factories in south central China was conducted to evaluate mortality from cancer and other diseases among workers exposed to different levels of silica and other dusts. A follow-up of subjects through December 31, 1989 revealed 6,192 deaths, a number close to that expected based on Chinese national mortality rates. There was, however, a nearly 6-fold increase in deaths from pulmonary heart disease (standard mortality ratio, 581; 95% confidence interval 538 to 626), and a 48% excess of mortality from nonmaligant respiratory diseases (standard mortality ratio, 148; 95% confidence interval, 139 to 158), primarily because of a more than 30-fold excess of pneumoconiosis. Pulmonary heart disease and noncancerous respiratory disease rates rose in proportion to dust exposure. Cancer mortality overall was not increased among the miners or pottery workers. There was no increased risk of lung cancer, except among tin miners, and trends in risk of this cancer with increasing level of dust exposure were not significant. Risks of lung cancer were 22% higher among workers with than without silicosis. The findings indicate that respiratory disease continues to be an occupational hazard among Chinese miners and pottery workers, but that cancer risks are not as yet strongly associated with work in these dusty trades.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:311 / 316
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Natural Course of Silicosis in Dust-exposed Workers
    杨海兵
    杨磊
    张钧岳
    陈镜琼
    Current Medical Science, 2006, (02) : 257 - 260
  • [2] Byssinosis and occupational asthma among cotton dust-exposed workers.
    Laraqui, CH
    Rahhali, A
    Laraqui, O
    Tripodi, D
    Curtes, JP
    Verger, C
    Caubet, A
    REVUE FRANCAISE D ALLERGOLOGIE ET D IMMUNOLOGIE CLINIQUE, 2002, 42 (02): : 133 - 141
  • [3] Genetic damage in wood dust-exposed workers
    Rekhadevi, P. V.
    Mahboob, M.
    Rahman, M. F.
    Grover, Paramjit
    MUTAGENESIS, 2009, 24 (01) : 59 - 65
  • [4] Natural course of silicosis in dust-exposed workers
    Yang Haibing
    Yang Lei
    Zhang Junyue
    Chen Jingqiong
    Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology [Medical Sciences], 2006, 26 (2): : 257 - 260
  • [5] Respiratory surveillance in mineral dust-exposed workers
    Wood, Clare
    Yates, Deborah
    BREATHE, 2020, 16 (01)
  • [6] Association of Silica Dust Exposure and Cigarette Smoking With Mortality Among Mine and Pottery Workers in China
    Wang, Dongming
    Yang, Meng
    Liu, Yuewei
    Ma, Jixuan
    Shi, Tingming
    Chen, Weihong
    JAMA NETWORK OPEN, 2020, 3 (04) : E202787
  • [7] LABORATORY DIAGNOSIS OF INFLAMMATORY LUNG DISEASES IN DUST-EXPOSED WORKERS
    TKACH, SI
    MAKOTCHENKO, VM
    TKACH, YI
    LABORATORNOE DELO, 1989, (10): : 76 - 77
  • [8] Association Between Proinflammatory Responses of Respirable Silica Dust and Adverse Health Effects Among Dust-Exposed Workers
    Zhou, Ting
    Rong, Yi
    Liu, Yuewei
    Zhou, Yun
    Guo, Jiali
    Cheng, Wenjuan
    Wang, Haijiao
    Chen, Weihong
    JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2012, 54 (04) : 459 - 465
  • [9] IgG-antibodies as exposure markers in grain dust-exposed workers
    Raulf-Heimsoth, M.
    Sander, I.
    Mayer, S.
    Fleischer, C.
    Bruening, Th.
    ALLERGOLOGIE, 2008, 31 (11) : 484 - 486
  • [10] Proportionate mortality among workers exposed to hardwood dust in Italy
    Scarselli, Alberto
    Corfiati, Marisa
    Marinaccio, Alessandro
    ANNALI DELL ISTITUTO SUPERIORE DI SANITA, 2022, 58 (03): : 197 - 203