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1.
Arch Environ Health ; 36(2): 66-74, 1981.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7212778

ABSTRACT

The incidence and severity of acute respiratory disease was studied in families in three New York communities with different ambient levels of SO2 and particulate air pollution. Upper, lower, and total respiratory disease rates in fathers, mothers, and school children tended to be higher in the communities with higher pollution levels. Similar higher rates, however, were not observed among preschool children. Regression analyses were used to adjust rates for socioeconomic status, parental smoking, chronic bronchitis in parents, and possible indoor pollution resulting from the use of a gas stove for cooking. After these adjustments the community differences were still significant (P less than .01), for schoolchildren. The indoor pollution related to gas stoves was a significant covariate among children. The effects of smoking were inconsistent. It was not possible to attribute the higher rates observed to any specific pollutant, since both SO2 and particulate matter levels were higher in the high pollution communities, nor was it possible to attribute the excesses to current levels of exposure or to a residual effect of previous higher exposure concentrations. The fact that young children did not follow the pattern suggests the latter. It was concluded, however, that current or previous exposures to the complexity of air pollutants in New York City was at least partially responsible for increased incidences of acute respiratory disease.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants/poisoning , Respiratory Tract Diseases/epidemiology , Acute Disease , Adult , Child, Preschool , Crowding , Educational Status , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , New York City , Respiratory Tract Diseases/genetics , Smoking , Socioeconomic Factors
2.
MMW Munch Med Wochenschr ; 122(24): 901-6, 1980 Jun 13.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6771627

ABSTRACT

In most industrialized countries mortality data are the only medically relevant complete statistics for the description of health and disease in a population. Although mortality data reflect just the opposite of the state of health of a population, specific age and sex mortality rates are important indicators of the health status of a population and beyond that for the social system, e.g. for the effectiveness of the subsystem of health services. Validation studies show that the diagnoses on death certificates are much more reliable than generally thought. Scientists must have access to information from the original death certificates because otherwise the increasingly desirable studies on the threat of environmental noxae to the population cannot be carried out.


Subject(s)
Mortality , Death Certificates , Epidemiologic Methods , Epidemiology , Humans , Public Health Administration , Statistics as Topic
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