Off the wire
Across China: Spidermen on the Yangtze cliffs  • 163,000 punished for discipline violations in H1  • Australia's Sydney Opera House to undergo largest facelift  • Across China: Growing tiger population a menace to China villagers  • Russia checks readiness of its missile forces in Far East  • Banking stocks weigh Aussie market on Thursday  • China Hushen 300 index futures close lower Thursday  • 1,236 Porsche vehicles recalled in China  • China treasury bond futures close higher Thursday  • Injured Bayern defender Boateng returns to training  
You are here:   Home

More miners detected with black lung disease in Australia's Queensland

Xinhua, August 11, 2016 Adjust font size:

Three more Australian miners based in Queensland have been diagnosed with black lung disease, local media reported on Thursday.

However, Australia's mining union CFMEU believed that there were more cases of those with the disease but many were refusing to come forward as they feared about losing their jobs.

In March, Xinhua reported that up to 1,000 coal miners in Queensland were feared to have contracted the black lung disease, 30 years after it was supposedly eradicated in Australia.

The black lung disease is caused by long exposure to coal dust and is common among coal miners and others who work in similar industries.

The disease resurfaced in Australia last December after Queensland state authorities confirmed that three of its coal miners had tested positive to black lung back then.

Coal miners in Queensland are required to undergo a medical assessment, once every five years, prior to starting work to detect any diseases including black lung, however, CFMEU claims that radiologists in the state weren't qualified to do such testing. Enditem