A 20-year follow-up of a population sample (aged 25-34) including coal-miners and foundry workers in Staveley, Derbyshire.
Open Access
- 1 August 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 37 (3), 230-233
- https://doi.org/10.1136/oem.37.3.230
Abstract
A 20-year follow-up of a population sample of men aged 25-34 has been completed in Staveley, Derbyshire. The sample was based on a private census, with brief industrial histories, that enabled four groups to be established--"non-dusty," "pure coal-mining," "pure foundry," and "other and mixed." The similarity of the mortality rates of non-dusty, coal-mining, and foundry groups is satisfactory, but there is, however, a surprisingly high mortality rate in the other and mixed group. We were unable to explain this on the basis of their industrial exposure, and only to a very limited extent by their smoking habits. We suggest that there is a small group of uncooperative men, overweight for their height and heavy smokers, who self-select themselves into jobs that are classified in a study such as this as other and mixed.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The mortality of men in the Rhondda Fach, 1950--1970.Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1979
- Environmental epidemiology. IV. Chronic respiratory disease in an industrial town: a nine-year follow-up study. Preliminary report.American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1968
- Population Studies of Chronic Respiratory Disease: A Comparison of Miners, Foundryworkers, and Others in Staveley, DerbyshireOccupational and Environmental Medicine, 1959