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Journal Article

Citation

da Cunha AA, Corona RA, Alves GC, Castilho-Martins EA. Rev. Bras. Med. Trab. 2021; 19(2): 181-190.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Associação Nacional de Medicina do Trabalho)

DOI

10.47626/1679-4435-2020-583

PMID

34603414

PMCID

PMC8447650

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The state of Amapá is located in Brazil's Legal Amazon and comprises 16 municipalities. Its history is marked by social vulnerability and industrial mining; therefore, its current socioeconomic and occupational context should be analyzed considering possible sociohistorical and geographic influences.

OBJECTIVES: To analyze and/or describe the epidemiological profile of workers, occupational accidents, the socioeconomic context, and time evolution of the number of workers in the state and their relationship with the state's gross domestic product.

METHODS: This is an analytic time series study based on official public data. We used a simple regression test to analyze the relationship between the number of workers and gross domestic product and to assess the time trend of the number of workers. The studied period was from 2007 to 2017.

RESULTS: The number of workers presented an increasing trend over time (R(2) = 0.902; p < 0.001), with a relative increase of 49.8% between 2007 and 2017. We observed a positive relationship between the annual increase in the number of workers and the state's gross domestic product (R(2) = 0.899; p < 0.001). The economic activity with the highest mean number of workers was public administration, defense, and social security. The highest socioeconomic indicators were observed in the state capital Macapá. Non-hazardous waste management was the activity concentrating the highest absolute number of occupational accidents.

CONCLUSIONS: This study highlighted important socioeconomic contrasts within the state. The significant increases in the gross domestic product and number of workers are signs of development, but the high number of occupational accidents represents a serious public health problem.


Language: en

Keywords

Brazil; occupational health; development indicators; gross domestic product; occupations

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