Unexplained kidney disease affecting rural workers across Central America, PRI's 'The World' reports

PRI's "The World" reports on an epidemic of an unexplained kidney disease that is affecting rural workers across Central America, writing, "[I]t's the second biggest cause of death among men in El Salvador, and in Nicaragua it's a bigger killer of men than HIV and diabetes combined," and "the latest theory is that the victims are literally working themselves to death." According to the news service, "El Salvador's health minister recently called on the international community for help," stating that "the epidemic is 'wasting away our populations.'"

"'It is important that the chronic kidney disease (CKD) afflicting thousands of rural workers in Central America be recognized as what it is -- a major epidemic with a tremendous population impact,' says Victor Penchaszadeh, a clinical epidemiologist at Columbia University in the U.S." and a consultant to the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), according to The World. The news service discusses possible explanations for the illness, such as exposure to farm chemicals and working long hours in extreme heat, and the consequences for workers who are let go after becoming ill but have no other alternatives for work (Sheehy, 12/12).


http://www.kaiserhealthnews.orgThis article was reprinted from kaiserhealthnews.org with permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent news service, is a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health care policy research organization unaffiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

Comments

  1. Voegeliceran Voegeliceran El Salvador says:

    Our THINK TANK Prevencion Insuficencia Renal en EL SALVADOR has in preliminary studies (together with NEFROLEMPA and NEFROGUYAPA, i.e. the coastal zone of the country) quite well datas that it has to do with the agrochemicals sprayed by airplanes and otherwise over the plantations of sugar and corn mainly...and the workers do not carry -for the heat understandable!- the prescribed masks...drink not enough or only coke, which leads to constant relative dehydratation which afects the glomerular filtration rate. After 4 years working in the fields, many need -life long!-
    dialysis!

  2. Emily Horgan Emily Horgan United States says:

    The original story referred to a complaint filed in 2008 by the Asociación Chichigalpa por la Vida (ASOCHIVIDA), with support from the NGO, Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL), to the World Bank through its independent complaints office for private sector projects- the Compliance Advisor Ombudsman(CAO).  ASOCHIVIDA  represents about 2,000 community workers affected by chronic kidney disease in Nicaragua and has been working with the company, an IFC client, at a dialogue table convened by The CAO.  Parties to the dialogue jointly chose Boston University School of Public Health to conduct an independent investigation into the causes of the disease. For more information, see www.cao-ombudsman.org/cases/case_detail.aspx?id=82

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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