深呼吸,男孩们:麦金太尔粉末项目矿工的声音。

IF 1.8 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Janice Martell, Tee Guidotti
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引用次数: 0

摘要

安大略省北部的金矿和铀矿工人代表了最大的工业劳工群体,他们历史上每天都接触到非自愿的工业医疗治疗,包括吸入被称为麦金太尔粉末的细碎铝粉。其中一名矿工的女儿于2015年创立了麦金太尔粉末项目(McIntyre Powder Project),记录暴露矿工的健康问题,以确定她父亲的帕金森症是否与吸入铝有关。作为回应,2015年至2021年间,553名矿工直接或通过其近亲在麦金太尔粉末项目注册。本文汇编了他们遭受麦金太尔粉末的生活经历,这与安大略省北部采矿业的官方叙述形成鲜明对比,后者在全球范围内许可使用麦金太尔粉末。此外,本文阐明了从矿工的披露中出现的有关工业实践,涉及激励索赔抑制,并提出了关于医疗筛查和监管执法有效性的严重问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Breathe Deep, Boys: Voices of the McIntyre Powder Project Miners.

Breathe Deep, Boys: Voices of the McIntyre Powder Project Miners.

Breathe Deep, Boys: Voices of the McIntyre Powder Project Miners.

Breathe Deep, Boys: Voices of the McIntyre Powder Project Miners.

Northern Ontario gold and uranium miners represent the largest cohort of industrial laborers who were historically exposed to daily nonconsensual industrial medical treatments involving the inhalation of finely ground aluminum dust known as McIntyre Powder. The daughter of one of those miners founded the McIntyre Powder Project in 2015 to document health issues in exposed miners, in an effort to determine whether her father's Parkinson's was related to aluminum inhalation. In response, 553 miners registered with the McIntyre Powder Project between 2015 and 2021 either directly or by their next-of-kin. This paper compiles their lived experiences of being subjected to McIntyre Powder, which contrasts starkly with the official narrative of the northern Ontario mining industry, which licensed its use globally. Additionally, this paper illuminates concerning industrial practices that emerged from the miners' disclosures, involving incentivized claims suppression, and raising serious questions about the effectiveness of medical screening and regulatory enforcement.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
4.30%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: New Solutions delivers authoritative responses to perplexing problems, with a worker’s voice, an activist’s commitment, a scientist’s approach, and a policy-maker’s experience. New Solutions explores the growing, changing common ground at the intersection of health, work, and the environment. The Journal makes plain how the issues in each area are interrelated and sets forth progressive, thoughtfully crafted public policy choices. It seeks a conversation on the issues between the grassroots labor and environmental activists and the professionals and researchers involved in charting society’s way forward with the understanding that lack of scientific knowledge is no excuse for doing nothing and that inaction is itself a choice.
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