What shapes local demand for ‘guest worker’ migrants in Japan? The case of the seafood processing industry

2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 2-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yusuke Mazumi
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgitte Hamann Laustsen ◽  
Øyvind Omland ◽  
Else Toft Würtz ◽  
Torben Sigsgaard ◽  
Niels E. Ebbehøj ◽  
...  

Introduction: The fishing- and the seafood processing industries are the largest industrial sectors in Greenland. Despite this, only a few cases of occupational diseases in this industry have been reported to the Danish Labor Market Insurance. Occupational asthma and allergy are well-known occupational diseases in the seafood processing industry worldwide and underreporting of occupational diseases in Greenland is suspected.Objective: The aim of the current study was to examine the associations between job exposures and occupational asthma and rhino conjunctivitis in workers in the Greenlandic seafood processing industry and to compare the prevalence of sensitization by type and degree of exposure to snow crab, shrimp, fish, and the fish parasite, Anisakis simplex.Methods: Data from 382 Greenlandic seafood processing workers were collected during 2016–2018. Data included questionnaire answers, lung function measurements, skin prick tests, and blood samples with ImmunoCAP. For all analyses, p < 0.05 was considered the level of significance.Results: 5.5% of the workers had occupational asthma and 4.6% had occupational rhino conjunctivitis. A large proportion of the workers were sensitized to allergens specific to the workplace; 18.1% to snow crab, 13.6% to shrimp, 1.4% to fish, and 32.6% to the fish parasite, A. simplex. We found a dose-response relationship between the risk of being sensitized to snow crab and A. simplex and years of exposure to the allergens in the seafood processing industry.Conclusion: This study showed that a considerable proportion of workers in the Greenlandic seafood processing industry had occupational asthma and rhino conjunctivitis. Additionally, the study showed high sensitization levels toward snow crab, shrimp, and the fish parasite, A. simplex. This supports the hypothesis of a considerable degree of underreporting of occupational allergic airway disease in the Greenlandic seafood processing industry. Prospectively, it is important to inform workers, leaders, and health care professionals of the health problems and the law on worker's compensation, and to initiate preventive actions at factory and trawler level.


2018 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 138-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas T. Guimarães ◽  
André L.M. Souza ◽  
Ana Iraidy S. Brígida ◽  
Angela A.L. Furtado ◽  
Patrícia C.M. S. Chicrala ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 113-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chandran Nair

The seafood processing industry is the major food processing industry in Thailand. It consumes large quantities of water and thereby generates huge volumes of wastewater of a polluting nature. A major tuna processing factory is presented as a case study to highlight the inter-related issues of excessive use of groundwater, the resultant deterioration in water quality and the economic consequences of this impact. To address these issues, the need to conserve water and reuse it is also examined in relation to the design and operation of a wastewater treatment plant using high loading rates in anaerobic ponds followed by a conventional activated sludge system.


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