影响死亡率水平和死因的人口特征和环境因素。复习一下。

J R Curtiss, D Grahn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对能源生产对人类健康的影响进行负责任的评估,需要事先考虑已知会影响死亡率及其原因的社会经济、文化和气候特征。本文讨论了15个人口特征和环境变量(教育、收入、职业、产业组合、社会经济地位、住房质量、气候、城市居住、地理居住、内部迁移、香烟消费、酒精消费、婚姻状况、外国出生或股票、宗教信仰)和3个年龄亚组。根据这些变量与死亡率之间关系的可靠性,为死亡率标准化指定了一组初始的8个变量。这8个变量分别是:教育、职业、产业组合、城市居住、婚姻状况、种族组合和烟酒消费。教育和职业与死亡率呈负相关。职业性接触有毒物质(以工业组合表示)、吸烟和饮酒与各种具体死亡原因呈正线性关系。城市居住、婚姻状况和种族与死亡率呈非线性关系,并在某些死亡原因中表现出一致的模式。除了这些特征外,还讨论了三个年龄亚组(小于1岁,1-14岁,大于或等于65岁),因为与其他人群相比,它们的发病率相对较高或较低。为了完整起见,还简要回顾了水和空气污染对死亡率的影响。本综述的独特之处在于对影响成人死亡率的变量进行了定量总结(见附录)。它是支持选择影响变量的数字关系的汇编,这些关系直接或间接地从已发表的数据中得出。
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Population characteristics and environmental factors that influence level and cause of mortality. A review.

Responsible evaluation of energy production effects on human health requires prior accounting for the socioeconomic, cultural, and climatic characteristics known to influence mortality rate and cause. Fifteen population characteristics and environmental variables (education, income, occupation, industrial mix, socioeconomic status, housing quality, climate, urban residence, geographic residence, internal migration, cigarette consumption, alcohol consumption, marital status, foreign birth or stock, and religious affiliation) and three age subgroups are discussed. An initial set of eight variables is indicated for mortality rate standardization, based on the reliability of their relationships with mortality. These eight variables are: education, occupation, industrial mix, urban residence, marital status, ethnic mix, and cigarette and alcohol consumption. Education and occupation are negatively related to mortality. Occupational exposure to toxicants (indicated by industrial mix), cigarette consumption, and alcohol consumption have positive linear relationships with various specific causes of mortality. Urban residence, marital status, and ethnicity have non-linear relationships with mortality and show consistent patterns for certain causes of death. In addition to these characteristics three age subgroups ( less than 1 year, 1-14 years, greater than or equal to 65 years) are discussed because of their relatively high or low rates compared to the rest of the population. A brief review of water and air pollution effects on mortality is included for completeness. Unique to this review is the quantitative summary (presented as an appendix) of the variables influencing adult mortality. It is a compilation of numerical relationships, derived either directly or indirectly from the published data, that support the choice of influencing variables.

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