Literature DB >> 2068593

Women's lung cancer mortality, socio-economic status and changing smoking patterns.

H Pugh1, C Power, P Goldblatt, S Arber.   

Abstract

Mortality data from the OPCS Longitudinal Study were used to determine whether the conventional classification of married women by their husband's occupation under-estimates the extent of social differences in lung cancer among this group. Differences existed for social class measures but alternatives based on housing tenure and car access defined socio-economic differences wider than any other previously recorded for England and Wales: married women living in rented housing and without a car were two and a half times as likely to die from lung cancer than those in owner occupied housing with access to a car. In 1957 and 1974 mothers of children included in the 1958 cohort study showed parallel socio-economic differences in smoking patterns as well as in uptake and cessation rates. Data from the General Household Survey for 1982 similarly suggest that cigarette smoking is more sharply differentiated using household rather than occupational measures of class. This suggests that wide differences in mortality are likely to persist through the eighties and beyond.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 2068593     DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(91)90086-r

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  5 in total

1.  Social class, marital status, and cancer of the uterine cervix in England and Wales, 1950-1983.

Authors:  M F Murphy; D C Mant; P O Goldblatt
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  1992-08       Impact factor: 3.710

2.  Educational attainment, smoking initiation and lifetime nicotine dependence among male Vietnam-era twins.

Authors:  J M McCaffery; G D Papandonatos; M J Lyons; K C Koenen; M T Tsuang; R Niaura
Journal:  Psychol Med       Date:  2007-10-22       Impact factor: 7.723

3.  A 28 year follow up of mortality among women who smoked during pregnancy.

Authors:  P Rantakallio; E Läärä; M Koiranen
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1995-08-19

4.  Childhood socioeconomic status, telomere length, and susceptibility to upper respiratory infection.

Authors:  Sheldon Cohen; Denise Janicki-Deverts; Ronald B Turner; Anna L Marsland; Margaretha L Casselbrant; Ha-Sheng Li-Korotky; Elissa S Epel; William J Doyle
Journal:  Brain Behav Immun       Date:  2013-07-08       Impact factor: 7.217

5.  Association of socioeconomic position with smoking and mortality: the contribution of early life circumstances in the 1946 birth cohort.

Authors:  Ingrid Giesinger; Peter Goldblatt; Philippa Howden-Chapman; Michael Marmot; Diana Kuh; Eric Brunner
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2013-11-18       Impact factor: 3.710

  5 in total

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