Artículos de revistas
Migrant Labor And Wear-out In Manual Sugarcane Harvesting In São Paulo, Brazil.
Registro en:
Ciência & Saúde Coletiva. v. 17, n. 10, p. 2831-40, 2012-Oct.
1678-4561
23099768
Autor
Luz, Verônica Gronau
Corrêa Filho, Heleno Rodrigues
Silva, Alessandro José Nunes da
Laat, Erivelton Fontana de
Vilela, Rodolfo Andrade de Gouveia
Silva, Fernando Oliveira Catanho da
Zangirolani, Lia Thieme Oikawa
Institución
Resumen
The scope of this paper is to describe the work of manual sugarcane harvesters, assessing the nutritional behavior and body composition between the beginning and the end of the harvest. A descriptive longitudinal study was made of harvesters in Piracicaba, São Paulo, Brazil, who answered a socio-demographic questionnaire and authorized measurement of Body Mass Index, Body Fat Percentage and Arm Muscle Circumference at three stages. Creatine kinase on the skeletal isoform, C-reactive protein and plasma urea were measured at the end of the harvest. Thirty male migrant harvesters with ages ranging from 18 to 44 from the Northeast (Ceará) were assessed over a nine-month period. The workers suffered significant body fat and weight loss in the first half of the harvest. Eighteen workers had abnormal levels of creatine kinase and four - out of 24 who had donated blood - had altered urea levels. Sugarcane harvesting work causes weight and body fat loss and gains in the lean body mass index, which suffers wear-out when working on consecutive harvests. It can also cause changes in biochemical markers of chronic systemic inflammation. Further studies will make it possible to comprehend the relationships between stress, wear-out, labor longevity and health in sugarcane harvesting. 17 2831-40