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Prevalence of Pneumoconiosis in the Construction Industry: A Systematic Review

Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12251/3225
Ver/Abrir: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-12547-8_51
ISSN: 21984182
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-12547-8_51
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Autor
Andaque, Gentil A.; González García, María de las Nieves; Branco, Jacqueline Castelo; Nunes, Elizabete; Guedes, Joana C.; [et al.]
Fecha
2023
Materia/s

Amianto

Enfermedades respiratorias

Análisis de puesto de trabajo

Sector de la Construcción

Neumoconiosis -enfermedad-

Nanosílice

Enfermedades profesionales

Prevención de riesgos laborales

Silicosis

Análisis de riesgos

Materia/s Unesco

3201.04 Patología Clínica

3204.02 Enfermedades Profesionales

3205.08 Enfermedades Pulmonares

5312.03 Construcción

3204.03 Salud Profesional

Resumen

Construction workers can be exposed to fibres, dust, and other toxic particles that can cause pneumoconiosis from silica, asbestos, and mixed dust. This systematic review aims to analyse how pneumoconiosis caused by exposure to dust contributed to the rise of occupational diseases in construction workers from 2001 to 2021. Sixteen keywords were combined to perform the search in six databases. Were included 26 articles which fulfilled all the defined inclusion criteria. A global analysis of risk disease distribution shows that exposures to mixed dust (41.1%), silica (37.5%) and asbestos (21.4%) were related to pneumoconiosis. In addition, individual analysis revealed that pneumoconiosis caused by exposure to chemical agents (silica, asbestos, and their dust) in the construction industry are predominantly related to the exposure to silica (Silicosis 38.1%), asbestos (asbestosis 33.3%, lung cancer 33.3%), and mixed dust (lung cancer 21.7%). Mixed dust seems to be the source of the highest incidence of pneumoconiosis, silica associated with silicosis is the most frequent disease. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

Construction workers can be exposed to fibres, dust, and other toxic particles that can cause pneumoconiosis from silica, asbestos, and mixed dust. This systematic review aims to analyse how pneumoconiosis caused by exposure to dust contributed to the rise of occupational diseases in construction workers from 2001 to 2021. Sixteen keywords were combined to perform the search in six databases. Were included 26 articles which fulfilled all the defined inclusion criteria. A global analysis of risk disease distribution shows that exposures to mixed dust (41.1%), silica (37.5%) and asbestos (21.4%) were related to pneumoconiosis. In addition, individual analysis revealed that pneumoconiosis caused by exposure to chemical agents (silica, asbestos, and their dust) in the construction industry are predominantly related to the exposure to silica (Silicosis 38.1%), asbestos (asbestosis 33.3%, lung cancer 33.3%), and mixed dust (lung cancer 21.7%). Mixed dust seems to be the source of the highest incidence of pneumoconiosis, silica associated with silicosis is the most frequent disease. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

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