Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T03:30:54.139Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

British Industrial Anthrax

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

At the commencement of this paper it was pointed out that anthrax has been associated with the manipulation of hair and other raw animal materials for at least a century and a half, but that it has only been studies from an industrial point of view during the last 30 years, with the result that in 1895 cases of anthrax, occurring in workshops and factories, became notifiable. From that time to the end of 1907, over 500 cases have been brought to the notice of the Home Office. Beside these cases of industrial anthrax many others arise, chiefly from contact with animals or animal carcases affected with anthrax; these are not notifiable in this country.

The proportion of industrial to non-industrial cases of anthrax is about 4 to 3.

An analysis of cases of anthrax notified between 1898 and 1907 shows:

(1) A progressive increase in the number of cases in the woollen and worsted-industries, probably due to the increased use of dangerous classes of wool.

(2) A progressive increase in the rate of mortality, due to the larger number of internal cases among manipulators of wool.

(3) A lower rate of mortality among workers on horsehair and bristles than in other industries.

(4) A high rate of mortality in the group of miscellaneous industries in which anthrax is not usually suspected, the diagnosis being then made too late for effective treatment.

In order to make an early diagnosis it is essential for anthrax to be suspected from the nature of the employment.

Among bristle and horsehair workers:

(1) Anthrax is more fatal to the women than to the men.

(2) The occupational risk is greater for the men than for the women, because the former are more often employed in the earlier, more dangerous manipulations.

(3) The occupational risk is greater and the mortality higher among the manipulators of horsehair than in brushmaking.

(4) Horsehair is from 8 to 10 times as likely to give risk to cases of anthrax as are bristles, and the risk of infection is greatest from Chinese, Russian and Siberian raw materials; this is confirmed by actual experience not only in this country but abroad.

(5) The risk to workers on horsehair is greater than the risk to workers on wool.

The nature of the lesion varies considerably with the industry, inhalation of spores being uncommon in any but the woollen industry, though internal cases undoubtedly occur among horsehair manipulators. This is not surprising as many of the processes in these industries are similar.

The position of the pustule varies slightly with the occupation; for example, pustules on the neck are most frequent among hide and skin workers, due to the frequent carrying of skins on the shoulder. Malignant pustule is most common on the exposed parts, and to the latter those less frequently washed, as the neck and face. The infection is in most cases by the nails, which harbour the dust containing anthrax spores.

In agricultural cases lesions on the upper extremity are most common.

The mortality varies with the situation. Difficulty of operation, frequent absence of the diagnostic signs of local necrosis, looseness of the cellular tissues increase the mortality.

In all countries except Great Britain agricultural anthrax is the most common, and consequently there is a close relation between the number of cases of human and animal anthrax.

Variations in the prevalence and mortality of anthrax among human beings occur in different countries, and may to some extent be accounted for by natural constitution and environment.

There has been a progressive increase of cases in Italy, but a decrease of the death-rate, roughly corresponding to the introduction of Sclavo's serum treatment.

French statistics, as do the English, emphasize the greater risk to horsehair workers, though the risk and mortality in Great Britain compare very favourably with those in Franch, and still more so with those in Germany.

The danger of infection from anthrax in the manipulations of animal hair and bristles depends on the origin, king and cleanliness of the materials, and the processes they have to undergo.

Bristles as imported vary immensely, some being well cleansed and prepared, others in an extremely dirty state, but they are always in a far more prepared state than the horsehair.

The long tail horsehair, being more valuable, is better cleansed and less likely to cause infection than the shorter mane horsehair.

Cases of anthrax occur in practically all the processes to which hair is subjected from its time of arrival even to the finished products. Further, incidence is greatest among workers in short hair as brush-makers, and in the earlier processes, i.e. when the hair is in a less prepared state.

Infection may be carried in clothes or nails to people outside by workers.

Anthrax spores may retain their vitality for years on hair and other materials.

The dangerous classes of hair are very generally used. This is not so in the woollen and worsted trades.

Anthrax is common among animals all over Europe and Asia, and in most countries there is an increased incidence during the hot summer months. It is probable that in certain districts special conditions exist which make them permanent centres of anthrax infection. Here too hides and hair from contact with the soil may possibly become infected without the animals actually contracting anthrax.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1909

References

page 280 note 1 Factory and Workshops Act 1895, Sect. 29.

page 286 note 1 Six of the cases under these two heads occurred in domestic workshops or among homeworkers.

page 288 note 1 Including one erysipeloid from without true pustule (fatal).