在工业队列研究中,由于选择工作和在工业中生存,死亡率低。

A J Fox, P F Collier
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引用次数: 456

摘要

职业群体往往被描述为相对健康,因为他们的死亡率低于全国平均水平。虽然这对那些对评估接触某种特定化学物质的影响感兴趣的人来说混淆了问题。在对英国聚氯乙烯生产过程中接触过氯乙烯单体的所有男子进行的一项研究中收集的数据进行进一步分析后,发现有三个因素导致了所观察到的低死亡率。对三个因素进行了量化:选择健康人口就业、健康男子在行业中的生存以及对这一人口进行追踪的时间长度。进入这个行业五年内的死亡率只有预期的37%;对于循环系统疾病和呼吸系统疾病,这一比例低至21%。标准化死亡率随入职时间的延长而逐渐增加,因此入职后15年的影响几乎消失。为了避免将选择效应与生存效应混淆,后者是通过将进入该行业后存活15年的男性根据他们在此期间是否仍在该行业中分开来测量的。那些离开的人的整体标准化死亡率比仍在该行业的人高出约50%。尽管这种影响在25岁至74岁年龄组和所有病因组中都是一致的,但在25岁至44岁年龄组以及肺癌和呼吸系统疾病中最为明显。
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Low mortality rates in industrial cohort studies due to selection for work and survival in the industry.

Occupational groups are often described as being relatively healthy because their mortality rates are lower than those of the national average. Although correct this confuses the issue for those who are interested in assessing the effects of exposure to a particular chemical. In a further analysis of data collected in a study of all men ever exposed to vinyl chloride monomer in the manufacture of polyvinyl chloride in Great Britain, three factors have been shown to contribute to the low mortality rates that were observed. The three factors: the selection of a healthy population for employment, the survival in the industry of the healthier men, and the length of time that this population has been pursued, have been quantified. The mortality experience within five years of entering this industry was shown to be as low as 37% of that expected; for circulatory disease and respiratory disease it was as low as 21%. There was a progressive increase in standardized mortality ratio with the length of time since entry so that the effect had almost disappeared 15 years after entry. To avoid confounding the selection effect with the survival effect the latter was measured by separating men who survived 15 years after entering the industry according to whether or not they were still in the industry after this period. Those who had left experienced an overall standardized mortality ratio some 50% higher than those still in the industry. This effect, although consistent in the age groups between 25 and 74 years and for all cause groups studied, was greatest in those aged between 25 and 44 years and for lung cancer and respiratory disease.

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