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New study finds that surface coal miners also at risk for Black Lung
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Wednesday, 20 Jun 2012
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A new study shows that black lung disease isn’t limited to coal miners who work underground but is found in coal miners working in open pit mines also

Studies for coal workers’ pneumoconiosis or black lung disease haven’t been done on surface miners in a decade and the miners were commonly thought to be less at risk for the disease than underground workers. Surface mines are open to the air, after all, and underground coal mines have frequent dust issues caused by mining in constricted spaces without much ventilation.

But the new study shows that surface miners get black lung, too.

Dr Edward Petsonk is with the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health’s Division of Respiratory Disease. He says black lung and the more serious form of the disease, progressive massive fibrosis is showing up in miners who have spent their whole career at surface mines.

He said “A lot of the miners who had this most severe form of the dust disease had never worked underground. So this really, in a new way, indicts the exposures on the surface.”

He added “The only people who get this disease are people who have had too much dust in the air that they have to breathe. So that implies that the dust controls are far from adequate at surface coal mines.”

The study also found that surface miners in Kentucky, Virginia and West Virginia were more likely to get black lung.

Source - weku.fm

(www.coalguru.com)

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