SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.56 issue219Enfermedad profesional y médicos de familiaDevelopment of a procedure for the resolution of conflict situations and psychological harassment at work author indexsubject indexarticles search
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

My SciELO

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • On index processCited by Google
  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO
  • On index processSimilars in Google

Share


Medicina y Seguridad del Trabajo

On-line version ISSN 1989-7790Print version ISSN 0465-546X

Med. segur. trab. vol.56 n.219 Madrid Apr./Jun. 2010

 

 

 

Type 2 diabetes in Mexican workers exponed to a potential source of dioxins in the cement industry determined by a job exposure matrix

Diabetes tipo 2 en trabajadores Mexicanos expuestos a una fuente potencial de dioxinas en la industria del cemento determinado a través de una matriz de exposición ocupacional

 

 

Luis Haro-García1; Cuauhtémoc Arturo Juárez-Pérez2; Guadalupe Aguilar-Madrid3; Vanessa Sánchez-Escalante4; Sergio Muñoz-Navarro5; Carlos Pérez-Lucio6

1Departamento de Salud Pública, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México D.F.
2Unidad de Investigación en Salud en el Trabajo, Centro Médico Nacional "Siglo XXI", Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social; México, D.F.
3Unidad de Investigación en Salud en el Trabajo, Centro Médico Nacional "Siglo XXI", Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social; México, D.F.
4Unidad de Investigación en Salud en el Trabajo, Centro Médico Nacional "Siglo XXI", Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social; México, D.F.
5Departamento de Epidemiología Clínica, CIGES (Capacitación, Investigación y Gestión para la Salud), Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de la Frontera, Temuco, Chile.
6 Toxicología Laboral, Procuraduría Federal de la Defensa del Trabajo, Secretaría del Trabajo y Previsión Social (STPS); Pachuca, Hidalgo, México.

Financial support: Fondo para el Fomento de la Investigación (FOFOI), Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social.

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

Purpose: To identify association between type 2 diabetes (DM2) with occupational exposure to potential dioxins source in Mexican cement industry workers.
Materials and Methods: 56 medical files of cement industry workers with diagnosis of DM2 were included; 56 medical files of workers from the same industry without DM2 were the controls. The daily dose of exposure (DDE) to the potential dioxins source per work years was estimated by a job exposure matrix and categorized as low, moderate, and high. Logistic regression model that correlated high exposure to potential source of dioxins (cement clinker confinement) per work years and presence of DM2 was adjusted by work seniority, patient age at which DM2 diagnosis was established and DM2 familiar background.
Results: the OR for the presence of DM2 in workers with moderate and high exposure to potential source of dioxins in the cement industry was 3.25 (1.10-9.57), p= 0.03, adjusted by work seniority, worker age at which DM2 diagnosis was established, and DM2 familiar background.
Conclusions: In according with the data explored in the medical files of cement industry workers, there is an association between high exposure to the industrial confinement of the cement clinker as a potential source of dioxins and presence of DM2 in a modest dose-response gradient.

Key Words: Dioxins, Occupational exposure, Type 2 diabetes.


RESUMEN

Propósito: Identificar asociación entre diabetes tipo 2 (DM2) en trabajadores Mexicanos con la exposición ocupacional a una fuente potencial de dioxinas de la industria cementera.
Material y métodos: Se incluyeron 56 expedientes clínicos de trabajadores de la industria cementera con diagnóstico de DM2; los controles lo constituyeron 56 expedientes clínicos de trabajadores de la misma industria pero sin DM2. La dosis diaria de exposición (DDE) a la fuente potencial de dioxinas por años trabajados se estimó a través de una matriz de exposición ocupacional y fue categorizada como baja, moderada y alta. El modelo de regresión logística que correlacionó la alta exposición a la fuente potencial de dioxinas (confinamiento de la escoria o clinker de cemento) por años trabajados y presencia de DM2 fue ajustada por antigüedad en el trabajo, la edad del paciente en la que se estableció el diagnóstico de DM2 y antecedente familiar de DM2.
Resultados: la razón de momios para la presencia de DM2 en trabajadores con exposición moderada y alta a la fuente potencial de dioxinas en la industria cementera fue de 3.25 (1.10-9.57), p= 0.03, ajustada por antigüedad en el trabajo, edad del trabajador en la que se estableció el diagnóstico de DM2, y el antecedente familiar de DM2.
Conclusiones: De acuerdo con los datos explorados en los expedientes clínicos de trabajadores de la industria cementera, existe asociación entre la alta exposición al confinamiento industrial de la escoria o clinker de cemento, como fuente potencial a dioxinas, y la presencia de DM2 con un modesto gradiente de dosis-respuesta.

Palabras clave: Dioxinas, Exposición ocupacional, diabetes tipo 2.


 

Background

Dioxins are ubiquitous substances considered practically anthropogenic that have arisen as undesirable product of industrial processes employing incineration at high temperatures.1-5 From the biochemical point of view, dioxins are organic, aromatic, and chlorinated compounds that are extremely lipophilic, with a bioaccumulative capacity adjudged as possessing toxic power, among others, to change glucose cell transportation and synthesis, as well as to diminish insulin efficiency, with the consequent negative effect on the general carbohydrate metabolism.6-16

Lethal doses of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (2,3,7,8-TCDD) -a type of dioxins, but with the greatest toxic power- in experimental animals produces abrupt weight loss, rejection of food, and inactivity, all these accompanied by reduction of adipose tissue, hypertriglyceridemia, and redistribution of fatty acids. This battery of effects has been explained by changes exerted by 2,3,7,8-TCDD on the lipoprotein lipase, which under normal conditions regulates insulin production and liberation in pancreas, and which in liver is assigned the task of controlling glucose metabolism and fatty acid synthesis.7

Other elements to consider comprise irregularities in glucose uptake due to defects in type 4 glucose transporters (GLUT-4), which under normal conditions are those responsible for supplying glucose to muscle and other tissues. This alteration has been cited as the most important mechanism in DM2 pathogenesis induced by experimental exposure to 2,3,7,8-TCDD.7-11 Despite this evidence, epidemiologic studies that have attempted to associate the presence of DM2 in workers chronically exposed to dioxinogenous sources, or even in populations acutely and accidentally exposed to high concentrations of these substances due to industrial disasters, have yielded not very conclusive results, which has placed in doubt the diabetogenic power of dioxins in humans.12-16 However, it is recognized that there are not yet enough information to discard this proposal, due on the one hand to the complex participation of multiple factors that trigger DM2, which should be controlled, and on the other hand to the difficulties in establishing environmental or occupational exposure, this due to the temporal and spatial fluctuations to which a worker performs his/her job.6,7,17,18

Based on what has been referred herein and because at present the cement industry is considered one of the main dioxin sources in the modern industrial world, the objective of the study was aimed to determine the association between occupational exposure to potential dioxins source in the Mexican cement industry and presence of DM2 in their workers.

 

Methods

From 2,714 medical files of workers at the Occupational Health Services of the Mexican Institute of Social Security in which DM2 and its complications are depicted as diagnosis between July, 1999 and June, 2003; 276 of them were identified with ≥1 year of occupational life performed in any cement industry workplace. Finally, 56 medical files of workers with diagnosis of DM2 established at work in this type of industry and fulfilled inclusion criteria were included to the study. In addition, 56 files of workers who also worked in the cement industry but without DM2 diagnosis were utilized to make up the comparison group.

The daily dose of exposure (DDE) to dioxins in all workers-partly based on the job exposure matrix proposed by Piaciatelli and collaborators-was estimated.19 In the reliability process of the instrument, staff who had worked in this type of industry supported with the workplace and job descriptions; this information improved the consistency in determination of the daily fraction of workers exposed to potential sources of dioxins expressed in terms of percentage (exposure lenght) and level of occupational contact with 2,3,7,8-TCDD; in the case of our study was considered the location where the cement clinker material -an intermediate product obtained after incineration in rotary furnaces manufactured from pre-triturated and standardized material and prepared for final milling, application of additives, and cooling prior to packaging and final shipment- is deposited. The subrogated concentration considered for this dioxinogenous source comprises that indicated by US Department of Health & Human Services based on average total dioxin-like toxic equivalents per kg of cement clinker produced. 20

The final result of the estimated DDE to dioxins was based on the equation proposed by Piacitelli et al.,19 i.e., 2,3,7,8-TCCD concentration x level of contact (0.01-1.5 based on what is demonstrated in Table 1) x time of exposure (the fractional percentage in 1 work day), which was applied for each particular case; with this the DDE to potential source of dioxins in the cement industry was calculated, and for estimation of the DDE/years worked in this type of industry, job seniority expressed in years that the worker performed in the cement industry was also identified in the workers medical files. Internal reliability of the instrument proposed measured by Kuder-Richardson coefficient was > 0.80 ("good internal reliability").21

Table 1. Occupational contact level with TCDD and daily fraction (%)

 

Worker age, total work years of the worker, fraction of total work years devoted to the cement, worker's age when the DM2 diagnosis was established, years of disease evolution, and familiar background of DM2 also were explored.

From values of DDE/years worked in the cement industry, two cut-off points were established to configure three levels: low DDE (<percentile25); moderate DDE (between percentile25 and percentile75), and high DDE (>percentile75). To determine the dose/response gradient presence of DM2 according to DDE/occupational years to which the worker was subjected in this type of industry, the category denominated as low was took as baseline. The associations were measured by odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI), and the Mantel-Haenszel Χ test with critical p value at 0.05.

Logistic regression model that correlated high occupational exposure to the cement clinker as a potential source of dioxins and DM2 was adjusted by work seniority, patient age at which DM2 diagnosis was established and DM2 familiar background.

 

Results

The 112 analyzed medical files corresponded to male workers with 51.3±8.1 of age with 31.9±9.4 total years of work life, which 31% were devoted to cement industry. Average of job seniority in this type of industry according to that consigned in the medical files included in the study was 11.1±6.3 years.

Regarding workplace types, the following were identified: 32 general laborers; 23 supervisors; two chemists; one chemical laboratory technician; five superintendents; four packers who also performed as load elevator workers and storage workers; two mill hopper workers; 12 employees who carried out diverse activities in the company's administrative services; six security employees; eight backhoe operators; 10 load workers, and seven maintenance workers.

The data obtained from the medical files concerning worker age, years worked at the cement industry, total worker occupational-life duration, the fraction dedicated to cement industry work, and DM2 familiar background, are shown in Table 2.

Table 2. Occupational characteristics, backgrounds, and disease evolution
according to the DM2 diagnosis

 

The median DDE of workers of the cement industry exposed to the confinement of the cement clinker and took this as a potential source of dioxins was identified as significantly higher among workers with type 2 diabetes [11.38 (Q25%, 0.26) - (Q75%, 17.07)], in comparison with those without DM2 [1.70 (Q25%, 0.0569) - (Q75%, 17.07)]; (p = 0.001). In a similar way, globally DDE/years worked in the cement industry between the work group determined to have DM2 and the group determined not to have this is shown in Figure 1.

 

Figure 1. DDE/years worked in the cement industry and
presence of type 2 diabetes mellitus

 

Percentiles25 and -75 distribution values of DDE to dioxins/years worked in the cement industry were utilized as cut-off points to establish exposure levels proposed as low (DDE/years worked <0.40), moderate (DDE/years worked >0.40-135.0), and high (DDE/years worked >135.0). The low level was established as baseline from the level that determined the association of DM2 with levels of DDE to dioxins/work years categorized as moderate and high; with this, we established the dose-response gradient (Table 3).

 

Table 3. DDE levels of exposure to dioxins7years worked and their association
with presence of type 2 diabetes mellitus in cement industry workers

 

With the exception of chemist and laboratory assistant (Table 4), all workplaces were distributed in both study groups. The worker identified as general laborer was the sole workplace with DDE/years average worked at an exposure level qualified as high. Supervisor, chemist, laboratory assistant, superintendent, packer-load elevator operator-storage worker, and maintenance personnel are found at the moderate exposure level, while those identified as security employees, back hoe operators, mill hopper operators, administrative staff, and load workers are found at the low exposure level.

 

Table 4. DDE to dioxins/years worker by job position according to the diagnosis of DM2

 

In Table 5 are shown the association between presence of DM2 and exposure to a potential source of dioxins in the Mexican cement industry in a logistic regression model adjusted by workers seniority at this industry, age at DM2 diagnosis, and familiar background for DM2.

 

Table 5. Logistic regression for the association between presence of DM2
and exposure to dioxins adjusted by seniority at cement industry,
age at DM2 diagnosis, and familiar background for DM2

 

Discussion

The occupational exposure matrix originally proposed by Piacitelli19 for final calculation of DDE to dioxins fulfilled the purpose of serving as adequate proxy to estimate retrospectively in the Mexican cement industry workers the level of contact with 2,3,7,8-TCDD that theoretically is presented in the cement clinker.20-23 However, it is possible that this matrix does not strictly fulfill the oligovariability criteria of possessing a scale that proposes a range of 0.01-1.50; additionally, it is also possible that these criteria were not accurately applied because the information was through reconstructed work scenarios, verbal job performance and workplace descriptions, and were not the result from a field study conducted at companies-of-interest, basically because these refusal to permit access to their facilities, and also impeded to know the historical and current 2,3,7,8-TCDD quantification registries of the dioxinogenous source, which in theory the companies are on their own.19,24

The study entailed only male workers; this is because it is common that companies at which the performance of tasks considered heavy or risky is perceived or required do not hire female workers.25-30

Although the proportion of DM2 in "active" workers in Mexico is unknown, the presence of this entity in cement industry workers through their medical files is very consistent with the prevalence described in work disability rulings of total Mexican worker population insured by the Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social; this same consistency was observed in that regarding the proportion of workers who presented the miscellaneous diseases that conformed the control group, which render greater representativity to the sample collected for this study.30-32 It is noteworthy that in Mexico, the economic subsector in which the cement industry is found, in conjunction with the plaster and lime industries, occupies approximately 40% of the entire personnel of the transformation industry's economic branch.32

From the clinic and epidemiologic point of view -with regard to age at appearance of diabetes mellitus in workers studied during the fourth decade of life and presence of family background of diabetes, which even continue to be discussed in terms of their protagonism in the appearance of diabetes- these are compatible characteristics with those found for general population. Nonetheless, negative labor-related effects have also been the reason for wide discussion,33-39 on the other hand, the DM2 familiar background in workers with high exposure to the potential source of dioxins demonstrated a very emphatic association.29

Regarding DDE to 2,3,7,8-TCDD and congener substances, the estimation of exposure through a job exposure matrix was higher among workers with DM2. In addition, the estimation reinforced the idea of considering years worked in the cement industry, this despite the analysis was over the workers medical files -a secondary information source- and not due to the limitations of the study itself. It must also be accepted that the majority of these instruments are imperfect, and originated the need of delving into the study of the diverse worker tasks performed, because each of these possesses a specific exposure profile which the estimation obtained can be more accurately.19,40

Despite the consistency with the modest results of association between a potential dioxinogenous source and presence of DM2 mentioned in diverse scientific literature, in no manner should it be understood, at least at present, to consider DM2 -specifically in this type of industry- as a work disease, until the diabetogenous capability of 2,3,7,8-TCDD in humans is fully elucidated.6-16,41

Acknowledgments

We are grateful Dr. Pablo López-Rojas for his comments and for his assistance in obtaining financial support from the Fondo para el Fomento de la Investigación (FOFOI), Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, for this manuscript.

 

References

1. Ramamorthy S, Ramamorthy S. Chlorinated dioxins and Furans, in: Chlorinated Organic Compounds in the Environment. Regulatory and Monitoring Assessment. Chapter 8, Lewis Publishers, New York USA, 1997; pp:275.        [ Links ]

2. Somers E, Douglas VM Dioxins and related compounds as issues of international concern, en: Human and Environmental risks of chlorinated dioxins and related compounds. Environmental Science Research, Plenum Press New York, USA, 1983; pp: 33.        [ Links ]

3. Koplan JP, Public Health Statement, in: Toxicology Profile for Chlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (Update) US Department of Health & Human Services, 1999; pp: 1-18.        [ Links ]

4. Everaert K, Baeyens J The formation and emission of dioxins in large scale thermal process. Chemosphere 2002; 46: 439-448.        [ Links ]

5. Kumagai S, Koda S, Miyakita T, Yamaguchi H, Katagi K, Yasuda N Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin and dibenzofuran concentrations in the serum samples of workers at continuosly burning municipal waste incinerators in Japan. Occ Environ Med 2000; 57 (3): 204-210.        [ Links ]

6. Remillard RB, Nigel JB Linking dioxins to diabetes: Epidemiology and biologic plausibility. Environ Health Perspect 2002; 110(9): 853-858.        [ Links ]

7. EPA-Dioxins: acute, subchronic and chronic toxicity, Health assessment for 2, 3, 7, 8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) and related compounds, National Center for Environmental Assessment. US Environmental Protection Agency. 2000, Washington DC; Chapter 3; pp: 6, 9,11, 17 y 28.        [ Links ]

8. Gorski JR, Rozman K. Dose-response and time course of hypothyroxinemia and hypoinsulinemia and characterization of insulin hypersensitivity in 2, 3, 7, 8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD)-treated rats. Toxicology 1987; 44 (3): 297-307.        [ Links ]

9. Michalek JE, Akhtar FZ, Kiel JL. Serum dioxin, Insulin, Fasting Glucose, and Sex Hormone-binding Globulin in veterans of Operation Ranch Hand. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1999; 84: 1540-1543.        [ Links ]

10. Schecter A et al. Recent dioxin contamination from Agent Orange in residents of a southern Vietnam city. J Occup Environ Med 2001; 43 (5): 435-443.        [ Links ]

11. Calvert GM, Sweeney MH, Deddens J, Wall DK Evaluation of diabetes mellitus, serum glucose, and thyroid function among United States workers exposed to 2, 3, 7, 8-tetrachloro dibenzo-p-dioxin. J Occup Environ Med 1999, 56: 270-276.        [ Links ]

12. Cranmer M, Louie S, Kennedy R, Kern P, Fonseca V. Exposure to 2, 3, 7, 8 Tetrachloro dibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) is associated with hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistence. Toxicol Sciences 2000; 56: 431-436.        [ Links ]

13. Pesatori AC, Zocchetti C, Guercilena S, Consonni D, Turrini D, Bertazzi PA. Dioxin exposure and non-malignant health effects: a mortality study. J Occ Environ Med 1998, 55: 126-131.        [ Links ]

14. Vena J et al. Exposure to dioxin and nonneoplastic mortality in the expanded IARC International Cohort study of Phenoxy Herbicide and Chlorophenol Production Workers and Sprayers. Environ Health Perspect 1998; 106 (Suppl 2): 645-653.        [ Links ]

15. Steenland K, Piacitelli L, Deddens, J, Fingerhut M. Cancer, heart disease, and diabetes in workers exposed to 2, 3, 7, 8-tetrachloro dibenzo-p-dioxin. J Natl Cancer Inst 1999; 91: 779-786.        [ Links ]

16. Bertazzi PA et al. Health effects of dioxin exposure: a 20 year mortality study. Am J Epidemiol 2001; 153: 1031-44.        [ Links ]

17. Teschke K et al. Occupational exposure assessment in case-control studies: opportunities for improvement. Occup Environ Med 2002; 59: 575-594.        [ Links ]

18. Tielmans E et al. Assessment of occupational exposures in a general population: comparison of different methods. Occup Environ Med 1999; 56: 145-151.        [ Links ]

19. Piacitelli L, Marlow D, Fingerhut M, Steenland K, Sweeney MH. A retrospective Job Exposure Matrix for estimating exposure to 2, 3, 7, 8-tetrachloro dibenzo-p-dioxin. Am J Ind Med 2000; 38: 28-39.        [ Links ]

20. EPA-Cement kilns and lightweight aggregate kilns. Combustion sources CDD/CDF other high temperature sources, en: Exposure and Health Reassessment of 2, 3, 7, 8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) and related compounds. Volume 5; Office of Research and Development, US, Environmental Protection Agency, Washington DC, 2000; pp: 1-11.        [ Links ]

21. Fajardo GA, Yamamoto KLT, Garduño EJ, Hernández HDT2, Martínez GMC. Consistencia y validez de una medición en la investigación clínica pediátrica. Definición, evaluación y su interpretación. Bol Med Hosp Infant Mex 1991; 48 (5): 367.        [ Links ]

22. García GA et al. Informe de la situación y los conocimientos actuales sobre las principales fuentes y emisiones de dioxinas en México. Segundo Reporte, Centro Nacional de Investigación y Capacitación Ambiental, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Unidad Iztapalapa, México DF, 13 de marzo, 2001; pp: 1-24.        [ Links ]

23. Jacott M, Reed C, Taylor A, Winfield M, Energy use Energy Use in the Cement Industry in North America: Emissions, Waste Generation and Pollution Control, Commission for Environmental Cooperation May 30, 2003; pp: 12-13.        [ Links ]

24. Feinstein AR. The Theory and evaluation of Sensibility, en: Clinimetrics, Yale University Press, USA, 1987; pp: 141.        [ Links ]

25. Forssen A, Carlstedt G. Work, health and ill health. New research makes women's experiences visible. Scand J Prim Health Care. 2001 Sep; 19 (3): 154-7.        [ Links ]

26. Angus J. Women's paid/unpaid work and health: exploring the social context of everyday life. Can J Nurs Res. 1994 Winter; 26 (4): 23-42.        [ Links ]

27. Charles N, James E. Gender and work orientations in conditions of job insecurity. Br J Sociol. 2003 Jun; 54 (2): 239-57.        [ Links ]

28. Gjerdingen D, McGovern P, Bekker M, Lundberg U, Willemsen T. Women's work roles and their impact on health, well-being, and career: comparisons between the United States, Sweden, and The Netherlands. Women Health. 2000; 31 (4): 1-20.        [ Links ]

29. Salazar SB, Garduño EJ, Rodríguez RMJ, Martínez GMC. Características de los pacientes con diagnóstico de invalidez por diabetes mellitus: un análisis en trabajadores del área de la salud. Rev Med IMSS 1991; 29: 255-258.        [ Links ]

30. Garfias RO et al. Perfil epidemiológico de la invalidez. Rev Med IMSS 2000; 38 (2): 101-111.        [ Links ]

31. IMSS. Memoria Estadística del Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social (IMSS). Riesgos de Trabajo e Invalidez. IMSS, Dirección de Prestaciones Médicas, Coordinación de Salud en el Trabajo, 2000, 2001, 2002 y 2003.        [ Links ]

32. INEGI (Instituto Nacional de Geografía, Estadística e Informática), XV Censo Industrial, México, 1999.        [ Links ]

33. Bennett HP. Aspectos epidemiológicos de la diabetes mellitus de tipo 2, en: LeRoith D, Taylor SI, Olefsky JM, Diabetes Mellitus, fundamentos y clínica, 2.a Edición; Ed. McGraw Hill, 2003; pp: 674.        [ Links ]

34. Mayfield JA, Deb P, Whitecotton L. Work disability and diabetes. Diabetes Care 1999; 22 (7): 1105-1109.        [ Links ]

35. Skerjanc A. Sickness absenteeism in diabetic employees. Occup Environ Med 2001; 58 (7): 432-436.        [ Links ]

36. Ng YCH, Jacobs P, Johnson JA. Productivity losses associated with diabetes in the U.S. Diabetes Care 2001; 24: 257-261.        [ Links ]

37. Akinci F, Healey BJ; Coyne JS. Improving the Health Status of US Working Adults with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A Review. Disease Management & Health Outcomes. 2003; 11 (8): 489-498.        [ Links ]

38. Trief PE, Paradies K, Aquilino C, Weinstock RS Impact of the Work Environment on Glycemia Control and Adaptation to Diabetes. Diabetes Care 1999; 22 (4): 569-574.        [ Links ]

39. Kraut A, Walld R, Tate R, Mustard C. Impact of Diabetes on Employment and Income in Manitoba, Canada. Diabetes Care 2001; 24 (1): 64-68.        [ Links ]

40. Benke G, Sim M, Fritschi L, Aldred G. Beyond the Job Exposure Matrix (JEM): The Task Exposure Matrix (TEM). Am Occup Hyg. 2000; 44 (6): 475-482.        [ Links ]

41. LFT (Ley Federal del Trabajo); Título Noveno: Riesgos de trabajo, artículos 475 y 476, México, Ed. Pac, 2001, p: 209.        [ Links ]

 

 

Correspondence:
Dr. Luis Haro-García,
Ave. Cuauhtémoc 330, Edificio "C", 1er piso,
Unidad de Investigación en Salud en el Trabajo,
Centro Médico Nacional "Siglo XXI",
México, 06720, Distrito Federal, México;
Tel: +(52)-55-5761-0725
Fax: +(52)-55-5538-7739
E-mail: luisharo2@hotmail.com

Recibido: 05-03-10
Aceptado: 18-05-10

Creative Commons License All the contents of this journal, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License