Title: Current Situation of Asbestos in Thailand
1Current Situation of Asbestos in Thailand
- Dr. Somkiat Siriruttanapruk
- Bureau of Occupational and Environmental
Diseases, - Ministry of Public Health, Thailand
2Introduction
- Asbestos
- It has been imported for more than 30 years
- It is used in several industries-roof tile,
cement pipe, etc. - Asbestosis is one of the occupational diseases
under national disease surveillance scheme.
3Production and use
- No asbestos mine in the country
- Only import for manufacturing
- Only chrysotile is allowed to use
- (crocidolite was banned in 1992 and amosite was
banned recently)
4The proportion of asbestos use in manufacturing
industry
90 cement manufacture, roof tile, cement pipe 8
brake and crutch 2 vinyl floor tile, gasket,
heat insulating material
5Amount of imported asbestos in Thailand
(1988-2002)
Tons
6Top 10 countries of imported asbestos in
Thailand, 2002
- 1. Russian Federation 46,132 Tons
- 2. Canada 42,091 Tons
- 3. Brazil 33,740 Tons
- 4. Kazakhstan 28,500 Tons
- 5. Zimbabwe 22,759 Tons
- 6. Czech Republic 1,914 Tons
- 7. Belize 1,656 Tons
- 8. Swaziland 1,638 Tons
- 9. South Africa 1,476 Tons
- 10. Botswana 1,080 Tons
7Top 5 countries of imported asbestos in Thailand
during 1997-2002
Tons
8Number of asbestos factories and workers by type
in each region of the country in 2004
9(No Transcript)
10Occupational Exposure Limits (OELs) of asbestos
in some Asian countries
Takahashi et al. (2003)
11Asbestos related diseases
- Never been reported to the surveillance scheme or
the Workmens Compensation Fund
12Why?
- 1. This maybe the real situation, or
- 2. Under-report of cases
- Long latency period of the disease
- High turn-over rate among workers
- Lack of awareness and knowledge in diagnosing the
disease among physicians - No follow-up or registration system
13Estimation of cases of asbestos-related diseases
in Thailand
- Tossavainen indicated a significant linear
correlation between consumption of asbestos and
the number of mesothelioma cases. - Calculating as follows
- Y 6.82x amount of consumption (25-30 years
ago)0.43 - Y No. of cases/million/year
- Amount of consumption No. of Kg/capita/year (2.5
Kg/cap/y) - Y(6.82x2.5)0.4317.5 cases/million/year
- Total new cases/year17.5x63 1,103 cases
14Results of the survey
Year No. of Factories No. of workers No. of abnormal CXR No. of pleural thickening No. of suspected asbestosis
1987 24 701 13 13 -
2000 6 669 ? - -
2003 6 140 41 5 -
2004 8 106 31 9 1
15Do we need to prevent and control
asbestos-related diseases?
16If we dont do anything, what will happen?
- Health status of exposed workers
- Cost of medical service and compensation
- Public alarming
- Economic problem
- Company and country reputation
17Can we prevent and control asbestos-related
diseases in Thailand?
18SWOT Analysis
- Strength
- well-established responsible organizations
- Existing relevant legislation system
- Good health service system
19SWOT Analysis
- Weakness
- No data for convincing policy makers and public
- Lack of awareness among government officers,
employers, employees, and occupational health
professionals - Poor agreement among relevant government agencies
- Lack of knowledge for health screening and
diagnosis of the disease among physicians - No effective surveillance system
20SWOT Analysis
- Opportunity
- Global concern
- Strong supportive network
- Low number of target population
- Alternative materials and other technical
preventive measures are available
21SWOT Analysis
- Threat
- Lack of policy support?
- Being against by pro-asbestos local and
international industries - Economic burden
- No public awareness
22Conclusions
- Consumption of asbestos in Thailand is very high
and the trend shows its increasing - Asbestos-related diseases will become more
important public health issue - Several measures need to be implemented urgently
- Strategy of asbestos ban is the best policy but
an achievement of this goal is still a long way
23Thank you very much!