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Why the health scheme for coal workers is inadequate to detect black lung

Portrait of serious coal miner with his arms crossed against a dark background

Malcolm Sim, Monash University

Recent cases of black lung in Queensland coal miners after many years of no known cases have raised important questions about control of dust exposure in coal mines, as well as the adequacy of medical screening to detect such cases at an early stage.

A review for the Queensland government on the health assessment of miners has identified serious deficiencies at virtually all levels of the scheme.

Black lung is the commonly used name for coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, which is a lung condition where inhaled coal dust causes scarring of lung tissue. Black lung can cause severe symptoms including shortness of breath, heart problems and death, and so it is important to detect it early and reduce further exposure to coal dust.

So what’s wrong with the Queensland coal miners’ health scheme?

Our review found several major deficiencies. These include:

  • a lack of appropriate training for doctors working within the scheme and a standardised process of deciding who should have chest x-rays
  • poor-quality tests to measure the functioning of the lungs
  • radiologists not being informed what they’re looking for in chest x-rays
  • inadequate data collection
  • a lack of clinical guidelines for when follow-up tests and specialist referral are necessary.

The scheme also has limited ability for doctors to access previous medical findings. This makes it difficult to assess longitudinal changes.

Some criticism has been made of chest x-rays performed under the scheme, but this requires some further context. No-one doubts that radiological expertise is of a high standard in Australia, but the problem with chest x-rays being performed under the scheme is that the radiologists have not been notified that it is for screening of lung disease in coal mine workers.

The radiologists have not been specifically trained for the purposes of the scheme, nor have they used the specific ILO reporting form designed to identify early changes consistent with black lung.

Why did this happen?

A key original purpose of the health assessments was to identify early stages of black lung in any affected coal miners so that measures could be put in place to reduce coal dust exposure. In more recent years, this purpose has been lost. The prime focus of the health assessments has instead become a pre-employment medical assessment.

This loss of purpose has then influenced the operation of the scheme, as the doctors who do these medicals haven’t focused on identifying early signs of black lung, but on whether the mine worker can do the job. This is a completely different perspective. This shift of focus away from lung screening has had a negative influence on the operation of the various components of the scheme.

The mining boom in Queensland compounded the problems with the health assessment scheme. The rapid expansion of the coal industry meant a huge influx of mine workers in a short time. As a result, the demand for health assessments for coal mine workers increased greatly, and the capacity of the health assessment scheme and the doctors performing these medicals became very stretched.

Complacency also played a factor. There was a widespread belief that lung disease in coal miners was a thing of the past, based on the apparent lack of any black lung cases being identified by the scheme. But nothing could be further from the truth, as this disease is still a major problem in the US and many other countries. Therefore it requires constant vigilance.

Another important consideration is that workplace exposure limits for coal dust in Queensland are set higher than the more stringent levels in many other countries, and even in other states of Australia.

A major problem in the effective control of workplace diseases is exposure limits not in keeping with the latest evidence. This has been exemplified by the situation in Queensland coal mines.

Primary prevention of coal dust diseases, through the effective monitoring and control of coal dust, should be the main focus of prevention efforts in this industry.

Medical screening is a secondary prevention measure, which should be thought of as an adjunct to dust control, not a replacement for it. This is particularly important to remember for diseases with long latency periods from first exposure to disease onset, such as black lung. The importance of focusing on dust control in coal mines was also an important conclusion of a recent Senate inquiry into coal dust.

Wider implications

The findings of our review have important implications over and above the coal industry in Queensland and the coal mine workers’ health scheme. It is well known there is a serious underestimate of cancer and other chronic diseases resulting from workplace exposures.

For an advanced country, we know remarkably little about the extent and risk factors for occupational diseases. The deficiencies of the Queensland coal mine workers’ health scheme, and the lack of reliability of the findings coming from it, have again highlighted this problem.

Australia needs more robust surveillance and other information systems to better document occupational disease, to assist in guiding prevention programs and to monitor the effectiveness of such programs. The workers of Australia deserve nothing less.

The Conversation

Malcolm Sim, Professor, Epidemiology & Preventative Medicine, Monash University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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  • What does not seem to reported is that pneumoconiosis (workplace respiratory disease) is not just contained in the Coal Mining workplace but that exposure to “Airborne Particulate and Fibre” is far more reaching in many other industries,
    such as Metalliferous Mining, Drilling, Quarrying, Earthmoving, Ports (concrete / tyre rubber dust), Sandstone Cutting, Concrete / Cement and Brick Manufacturing, Construction, Agriculture and many others where “dust” ensues in the workplace
    environment.
    As reported in the Conversation April 21st 2016. there were 25,000 deaths from Black Lung (CWD- Coal Workers Disease) reported in the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013 (GBD 2013). However, what was not mentioned in the news article was that the same study / report also stated the morbidity rates for other types of Particulate and Fibres in the Workplace:
    46,000 deaths of Silicosis (not related to Coal Mining).
    24,000 deaths from Asbestosis.
    164,000- other Pneumoconiosis (Worker Exposure to Particulate).
    How serious is the issue of pneumoconiosis- I am afraid- very! There is
    much litigation occurring in world dealing with the occupational respiratory disease in relation to Silicosis, DPM (Diesel Particulate Matter / Exhaust), Asbestosis and other chronic bronchial / tracheal / lung disease, as well as other health issues (eg
    workplace asthma, kidney disease, etc).
    For example, recently Metalliferous Miners in South Africa (as reported in Reuters May 2016), successfully lodged a class action suite against Mining Gold Companies for the contraction of Silicosis, which has wider ramifications
    across the word Also another aspect that does not seem to be considered in any of the recent news articles is exposure is not just from working in an open environment. But as any Operators have experienced, exposure has proven to more concentrated in Enclosed Cabins of Fixed and Mobile Plant due to inadequate Cabin Filtration and Pressuriser engineering controls. In addition, other OH&S issues are Co2, inadequate thermal comfort and resulting fatigue effects in Enclosed Cabins.

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