Abstract
BackgroundThe triple epidemic of silicosis, tuberculosis and HIV infection among migrant miners from South Africa and neighbouring countries who have worked in the South African mining industry is currently the target of regional and international control efforts. These initiatives are hampered by a lack of information on this population.MethodsThis study analysed the major South African mining recruitment database for the period 1973 to 2012 by calendar intervals and demographic and occupational characteristics. Changes in area of recruitment were mapped using a geographic information system.ResultsThe database contained over 10 million contracts, reducible to 1.64 million individuals. Major trends relevant to health projection were a decline in gold mining employment, the major source of silicosis; increasing recruitment of female miners; and shifts in recruitment from foreign to South African miners, from the Eastern to the Northwestern parts of South Africa, and from company employees to contractors.ConclusionsThese changes portend further externalisation of the burden of mining lung disease to home communities, as miners, particularly from the gold sector, leave the industry. The implications for health, surveillance and health services of the growing number of miners hired as contractors need further research, as does the health experience of female miners. Overall, the information in this report can be used for projection of disease burden and direction of compensation, screening and treatment services for the ex-miner population throughout Southern Africa.
Highlights
The triple epidemic of silicosis, tuberculosis and Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection among migrant miners from South Africa and neighbouring countries who have worked in the South African mining industry is currently the target of regional and international control efforts
The South African mining industry has been built on migrant labour from the rural areas of South Africa and neighbouring countries, a system which much reduced in size persists today
Population tuberculosis risk is further elevated by a prevalence of HIV infection of the order of 25% [5, 6] and a synergistic effect of HIV infection and silicosis on such risk [7]
Summary
The triple epidemic of silicosis, tuberculosis and HIV infection among migrant miners from South Africa and neighbouring countries who have worked in the South African mining industry is currently the target of regional and international control efforts. These initiatives are hampered by a lack of information on this population. Population tuberculosis risk is further elevated by a prevalence of HIV infection of the order of 25% [5, 6] and a synergistic effect of HIV infection and silicosis on such risk [7] Consistent with these causal associations, studies of gold miners over the past two decades have confirmed high prevalences of silicosis of Ehrlich et al BMC Public Health (2018) 18:93
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