Occupations, cigarette smoking, and lung cancer in the epidemiological follow-up to the NHANES I and the California Occupational Mortality Study.
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- Vol. 73 (2) , 370-97
Abstract
What jobs are associated with the highest and lowest levels of cigarette use and of lung cancer? Are there gender differences in these jobs? Two data sets-the Epidemiological Follow-up to the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHEFS) and the California Occupational Mortality Study (COMS) were analyzed to answer these questions. For females, the broad occupations ranking from highest to lowest cigarette use in the NHEFS was: transportation operators, managers, craft workers, service workers, operatives, laborers, technicians, administrative workers, farm owners and workers, sales workers, no occupation, and professionals. The corresponding ranking for males was: transportation operators, no occupation, laborers, craft workers, service workers, technicians, and professionals. The highest-ranking jobs in the COMS were waitresses, telephone operators, and cosmetologists for women, and water-transportation workers, roofers, foresters and loggers for men. Teachers were especially low on all four lists. This study could not determine whether employment within any occupation encouraged smoking or if smokers selected certain occupations.This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reducing attrition bias with an instrumental variable in a regression model: Results from a panel of rheumatoid arthritis patientsStatistics in Medicine, 1993
- Patterns and causes of gender differences in smokingSocial Science & Medicine, 1991
- The confounding of occupation and smoking and its consequencesSocial Science & Medicine, 1990
- Stress, emotion, and human immune function.Psychological Bulletin, 1990
- Retirement Differences by Industry and OccupationThe Gerontologist, 1988
- Predictors of disability among midlife men and women: Differences by severity of impairmentJournal of Community Health, 1988
- A cognitive-behavioral treatment for rheumatoid arthritis.Health Psychology, 1988
- STRESSFUL WORK CONDITIONS AND DIASTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE AMONG BLUE COLLAR FACTORY WORKERSAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1987
- Changes in smoking characteristics by type of employment from 1970 to 1979/80American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 1987
- Job stress, cigarette smoking and cessation: The conditioning effects of peer supportSocial Science & Medicine, 1985