Literature DB >> 9485483

Lung cancer, proximity to industry, and poverty in northeast England.

T Pless-Mulloli1, P Phillimore, S Moffatt, R Bhopal, C Foy, C Dunn, J Tate.   

Abstract

This study assesses whether deprived populations living close to industry experience greater mortality from lung cancer than populations with comparable socioeconomic characteristics living farther away. Mortality data, census data, a postal survey of living circumstances, historic and contemporary data on air quality and a historic land-use survey were used. Analysis was based on two conurbations in England, Teesside and Sunderland. Housing estates in Teesside were selected based on socioeconomic criteria and distinguished by proximity to steel and chemical industries; they were grouped into three zones: near (A), intermediate (B), and farther (C), with a single zone in Sunderland. We included 14,962 deaths in 27 estates. Standardized mortality ratios (SMR) for lung cancer [International Classification of Diseases #9 (ICD-9) 162] and cancers other than lung (ICD-9 140-239, excluding 162), and sex ratios were calculated. Mortality from lung cancer was well above national levels in all zones. For men, a weak gradient corresponding with proximity to industry at younger ages reversed at older ages. In women 0-64 years of age, stronger gradients in lung cancer mortality corresponded with proximity to industry across zones A, B, and C (SMR = 393, 251, 242, respectively). Overall rates in Teesside were higher than Sunderland rates for women aged 0-64 years (SMR = 287 vs. 185) and 65-74 years (SMR = 190 vs. 157). The association between raised lung cancer mortality and proximity to industry in women under 75 years of age could not be explained by smoking, occupation, socioeconomic factors, or artifact. Explanations for differences between men and women may include gender-specific occupational experiences and smoking patterns. Our judgment is that the observed gradient in women points to a role for industrial air pollution.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9485483      PMCID: PMC1532971          DOI: 10.1289/ehp.98106189

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Health Perspect        ISSN: 0091-6765            Impact factor:   9.031


  20 in total

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9.  A case-control study of lung cancer with special reference to the effect of air pollution in Poland.

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Authors:  P J Lawther; R E Waller
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  1978-02       Impact factor: 9.031

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  19 in total

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Authors:  R Edwards; T Pless-Mulloli; D Howel; T Chadwick; R Bhopal; R Harrison; H Gribbin
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7.  Environmental exposure to emissions from petrochemical sites and lung cancer: the lower Mississippi interagency cancer study.

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10.  No association between ambient particulate matter exposure during pregnancy and stillbirth risk in the north of England, 1962-1992.

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