General

China Reports Nearly 1 mn Cases of Occupational Diseases

Author : NewsGram Desk

China reported over 970,000 cases of occupational diseases by the end of 2018 of which 90 per cent cases were pneumoconiosis.

The data was given by China's State Council Information Office.

According to a study, of the 900 million Chinese workers, 25 million are exposed to occupational hazards each year with pneumoconiosis being the most prevalent disease among them.

It's a chronic and deadly lung disease caused by inhaling dust or small particles.

FILE – Workers are seen at a Foxconn factory in Longhua, Guangdong province, China, May 26, 2010. Foxconn is Apple's main supplier of iPhones. VOA

Li Bin, Deputy Director of the National Health Commission, was quoted as saying by Xinhua that the panel would beef up the prevention and treatment for pneumoconiosis in partnership with related departments.

Li also stressed concerted efforts to prevent pneumoconiosis patients from falling into or returning to poverty due to the illness, by means of medical insurance, medical assistance and living support.

The commission will also make efforts to safeguard labor health by improving legislation, government supervision and occupational health training, he said.

A total of 132 diseases of 10 types are classified as occupational diseases in China, Li said, adding that other employment hazards including poison, noise and radiation should be controlled. (IANS)

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp 

J&K Examination Board to Hold Counselling for 50 Supernumerary MBBS Seats for Vaishno Devi Medical College Students Amid NMC Recognition Row

India Tops Global Charts in Women STEM Education, Workforce Participation Still Trails: Report

US Formally Exits World Health Organization Marking a Major Global Health Policy Shift, Cites Covid-19 Response Failure

IIT Bombay Launches Smart AI Platforms to Help Decode Brain Diseases and Drug Targets

After Greenland–Iceland Slip-Up at Davos, Trump Teases Plans on Greenland Negotiations, but Denmark and Greenland Reiterate Sovereignty Is Non-Negotiable