A Public health wound: health and work among children engaged in the worst forms of child labour in the informal sector in Dhaka, Bangladesh: a retrospective analysis of Médecins Sans Frontières occupational health data from 2014 to 2023

公共卫生创伤:孟加拉国达卡非正规部门中最恶劣形式童工的健康和工作状况:对无国界医生组织2014年至2023年职业健康数据的回顾性分析

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Bangladesh has the second highest burden of child labour in South Asia. The informal sector employs most of the children however, data on health including injuries and place of work for children are limited. As the deadline for the Sustainable Development Goals to end child labour is upon us, it is paramount to document the impact of child labour on health. This study aims to contribute to this knowledge gap by presenting medical data from occupational health clinics (OHCs) set up by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in a peri-urban area of Dhaka, Bangladesh. METHODS: We did a retrospective analysis of health care records of children attending MSF OHCs between February 2014 and December 2023. We stratified the analysis by sex and age (< 14 years and ≥ 14- < 18 years). We looked at morbidities according to type of factory, whether children reported working with machinery, and examined nutritional and mental health (2018-2023) status. RESULTS: Over the study period, there were 10,200 occupational health consultations among children < 18 years, of which 4945 were new/first time consultations. The average age of children attending their first consultation was 14.7 years, of which 61% were male. Fifteen percent reported living inside the factory. Children worked in all prohibited categories of the informal sector. Almost all children reported operating machinery. Musculoskeletal (26%) and dermatological (20%) were the most identified conditions, and 7.5% of consultations were for work-related injuries. A higher proportion of male children had injuries (11% vs 2.5% in girls). Children working in metal factories accounted for most injuries (65%). Mood-related disorders accounted for 86% of the 51 mental health consultations. Half of all children were malnourished with higher levels in boys and those < 14 years. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that children face hazardous realities; engaged in the worst form of labour, bearing important morbidity and injury burden, with vulnerabilities varying by sex and age. Despite their economic contributions to the informal sector, they remain largely invisible and exploited. This study highlights the urgent need for child rights-based research and cross-sectoral approaches that actively involve children to develop sustainable, targeted solutions to eliminate child labour.

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