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Incidence of tuberculosis and HIV and progression of silicosis and lung function impairment among former basotho gold miners

✍ Scribed by Harriet H. Park; Brendan V. Girdler-Brown; Gavin J. Churchyard; Neil W. White; Rodney I. Ehrlich


Book ID
101438825
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
121 KB
Volume
52
Category
Article
ISSN
0271-3586

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

Pulmonary tuberculosis and HIV incidence, mortality, and the progression of silicosis and lung function impairment are described over a 1‐year period in migrant ex‐gold miners from Lesotho.

Methods

Seven hundred seventy‐nine Basotho miners were followed for 1 year starting 18 months after lay‐off from a South African gold mine in 1998. At baseline and follow‐up, they underwent a respiratory symptom interview, physical examination, HIV test, chest radiograph, and spirometry.

Results

Five hundred thirteen of 779 (65.9%) participants attended both baseline and follow‐up visits. HIV incidence was 5.4/100 person‐years (95% CI: 3.4–8.2). Prevalence of silicosis (ILO score ≥1/1) was 26.6% at baseline and 27.0% at follow‐up. Active tuberculosis diagnosed at baseline was a strong predictor of radiological progression of silicosis. Lung function as measured by FEV~1~ declined an average of 91 ml between visits (95% CI: 67–116 ml). Calculated minimum incidence of tuberculosis was 3,085/100,000/years (95% CI: 1,797–4,940) at follow‐up. Of those seen at baseline, 18 died before their scheduled follow‐up visit (mean age: 51 years).

Conclusions

High rates of mortality and of HIV infection and pulmonary tuberculosis were found in this cohort after leaving the South African goldmines. Continuing lung function loss was also apparent. A partnership between the South African mining industry and governments in labor‐sending areas of Southern Africa is needed to provide continuity of care and access to HIV and tuberculosis treatment and prevention services. Active silicosis surveillance and an improved statutory compensation system are also needed. These findings can serve as a baseline against which the impact of such interventions can be assessed. Am. J. Ind. Med. 52:901–908, 2009. © 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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