CHILLIWACK RESPIRATORY SURVEY 1963 .3. PREVALENCE OF RESPIRATORY DISEASE IN A RURAL CANADIAN TOWN
- 1 January 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 92 (19), 1007-+
Abstract
The prevalence of chronic respiratory symptoms and of abnormalities in pulmonary function was determined by a survey of persons, aged 25 to 74, residing during May and June 1963 in a rural town, Chilliwack, B.C. Morning phlegm was reported by 26% of men and 13% of women. Chronic bronchitis was considered present in 21.5% of men and 11.3% of women. More serious obstructive lung disease, not related to heart disease, was found in 12.6% of men and 8.7% of women. These prevalences were higher than those found at Berlin, New Hampshire, USA, in 1961. Demographic factors, such as birthplace, occupational class and measures of social stability, were not related to the prevalence of respiratory disease at Chilliwack. Some observer variation was found after analysis to be the result of non-randomization of respondents among the observers. An incidental observation was a high prevalence at Chilliwack of heart disease and hypertension under treatment.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Air Pollution Levels and Chronic Respiratory DiseaseArchives of environmental health, 1965
- CHILLIWACK RESPIRATORY SURVEY 1963 .I. METHODOLOGY1965
- An Anglo-American Comparison of the Prevalence of BronchitisBMJ, 1964
- Respiratory Symptoms, Lung Function, and Smoking Habits in an Adult PopulationAmerican Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1964
- An Account of Chronic Bronchitis in Great Britain with a Comparison Between British and American Experience of the DiseaseDiseases of the Chest, 1963
- A report on the first two stages of the co-ordinated study of chronic bronchitis in the Department of Veterans Affairs, Canada.1962
- Chronic BronchitisBMJ, 1961
- The veterans administration-army cooperative study of pulmonary functionAmerican Journal Of Medicine, 1961
- Tobacco Smoking, Respiratory Symptoms, and Ventilatory CapacityBMJ, 1959
- Lung Cancer Mortality and the Length of Cigarette EndsBMJ, 1959