By Noel Brinkerhoff
From AllGov
From AllGov
Thousands
of workers in Central America are dying from kidney disease that has
turned into an epidemic, according to health experts.
More than 24,000 people in El Salvador and Nicaragua
have died since 2000 from kidney failure, which usually occurs in
patients with diabetes and high-blood pressure. But the patients for the
most part don’t suffer from these disorders.
Some people have blamed the problem on the agricultural chemicals
used on sugar cane plantations, where many of the victims have worked.
But many others have toiled in mines and other manual labor occupations,
leading others to speculate that repeated bouts of extreme dehydration
are causing the workers’ kidneys to shut down.
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