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BEIJING, Feb. 17 -- Migrant workers are at the most
threat of contracting occupational diseases, health chiefs claim.
According to the latest statistics from the Ministry of Health, around 90 per cent of the patients suffering from diseases relating to the workplace are migrant workers.
Officials from the State Administration of Work
Safety said at a recent seminar the reason for the high figure was because of
their poor working conditions.
The authority added that the total number of Chinese
suffering from work-related accidents is on the rise every year, particularly
among younger workers.
About 200 million Chinese people are believed to be
at risk of contracting occupational diseases, and most work in small-town
industrial enterprises.
Qin Nainian, a farmer of Lixing Village in Mashan
County of South China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, had to quit his job
because of "black lung disease," or pneumoconiosis, after nine years of working
in a gold mine in South China's Hainan Province.
"I often feel acute pain in my chest and can't
perform any hard physical work," Qin was quoted by the Workers Daily as saying.
Qin's illness was caused by dust inhaled in
underground mines and is the severest occupational disease among miners. People
with the disease suffer from acute pains in the chest, a bad cough and often
come down with colds. The worst cases normally die of respiratory failure.
Many of Qin's fellow villagers have similar
conditions as they worked together to try to make their fortunes from the mines,
only to end up suffering with diseases that they cannot afford to treat.
The number of patients suffering pneumoconiosis
stands at 580,000, of which 140,000 have already died since China established an
occupational disease reporting system in the 1950s, according to official
statistics.
As the country began to move towards a market economy
in the early 1980s, the government's role in ensuring workplace safety was
gradually transferred to enterprises.
But many of them have lowered input into worker
safety in order to reduce operating costs.
The problem is more acute in private companies, where
workplace accidents happen frequently.
But many enterprises have not abided by the law on
occupational disease prevention, which is considered to be a major factor behind
China's grave situation.
Experts say an incomplete prevention and treatment
mechanism for diseases is to blame.
All of society needed to be involved in the
prevention and treatment of occupational diseases, said Ge Xianmin, a veteran
occupational disease prevention expert, who added the government should also
play a major role.
As part of its efforts to decrease work-related
diseases, the General Administration of Work Safety is working to draw up
related regulations.
(Source: China Daily) |