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Study on Silicosis in Migrant Workers / 日本農村医学会雑誌
Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine ; : 810-817, 1981.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-377351
ABSTRACT
The purpose of this study is to investigate the prevalence of and to classify the types of silicosis patients who were working at that time as migrant workers in the eastern part of Toyama Prefecture. Migrant workers are known in Japanese as “dekasegi” This term refers to workers who migrate seasonally from their home towns to areas where work is more available.<BR>Questionnaires were sent to all male inhabitants aged 30 or over in the selected five areas. Eighty-seven percent of the questionnaires were answered and returned. Based on the results, 482 inhabitants were selected as migrant workers with experience in jobs where they were exposed to large amount of dust. Chest roentgenography and subjective symptoms were examined in these subjects.<BR>The results obtained were follows;<BR>(1) Eight hundred and eighty-five of the respondents (41%) had worked as migrant workers.Of these, 580 men (66%) had worked in jobs with exposure to dust.<BR>(2) Of the 482 migrant workers whose jobs exposed them to dust, 424 silicosis cases (88%) were found by chest roentgenographic examination. Silicosis is classified into four types according to the national Pneumoconiosis Law on the basis of chest roentgenographic findings. These patients included 195 cases of type 1, 123 cases of type 2, 59 cases of type 3 and 47 cases of type 4 silicosis.<BR>(3) The prevalence of disease symptoms in the silicosis patients included ; cough 39%, phlegm 40%, shortness of breath 41%, palpitations 17% and wheezing in 20% of the cases. The silicosis patients showed a higher frequency of respiratory disease symptoms than those dust-exposed workers who did not evidence signs of silicosis.<BR>(4) The silicosis patients were found in 98% of the migrant workers whose exposure to dust lasted a period of more than 20 years, 89% in men whose work was between 10 and 19 years and 76 % in men who had worked less than 10 years.<BR>(5) The silicosis in 297 cases (70% of the total number of disease patients) was first detected during the examinations in the course of this research.
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Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Japanese Journal: Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine Year: 1981 Type: Article

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Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Japanese Journal: Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine Year: 1981 Type: Article