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Oscillating migration and the epidemics of silicosis, tuberculosis, and HIV infection in South African gold miners

✍ Scribed by David Rees; Jill Murray; Gill Nelson; Pam Sonnenberg


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
139 KB
Volume
53
Category
Article
ISSN
0271-3586

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

Hundreds of thousands of men from rural areas of South Africa and neighboring countries have come to seek work in the gold mines. They are not immigrants in the usual sense as they work for periods in the mines, go home, and then return. This is termed oscillating or circular migration. Today we have serious interrelated epidemics of silicosis, tuberculosis, and HIV infection in the gold mining industry.

Methods

This article discusses the role of oscillating migration in fuelling these epidemics, by examining the historical, political, social, and economic contexts of these diseases.

Results

The impact of silicosis, tuberculosis, and HIV infection extends beyond individual miners to their families and communities.

Conclusion

Failure to control dust and tuberculosis has resulted in serious consequences decades later. The economic and political migrant labor system provided the foundations for the epidemics seen in southern Africa today. Am. J. Ind. Med. 53:398–404, 2010. Β© 2009 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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