Assessment of the healthy worker survivor effect in cancer studies of the United Autoworkers-General Motors cohort
Abstract:
Objective The healthy worker survivor effect (HWSE) can affect the validity of occupational studies when data are analysed incorrectly. HWSE depends on three underlying conditions: (1) leaving work predicts future exposure, (2) leaving work is associated with disease outcome and (3) prior exposure increases probability of leaving work. If all these conditions are satisfied, then employment status is a time-varying confounder affected by prior exposure, and standard regression will produce bias. We assessed these conditions for cancer outcomes in a cohort of autoworkers exposed to metalworking fluids (MWF). Methods The cohort includes 31 485 workers followed for cancer incidence from 1985 to 1994. As occupational exposures to straight, soluble and synthetic MWFs are necessarily zero after leaving work, condition (1) is satisfied. Cox models for cancer incidence and for employment termination were used to …
Año de publicación:
2017
Keywords:
Fuente:
googleTipo de documento:
Other
Estado:
Acceso abierto
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Epidemiología
Áreas temáticas de Dewey:
- Enfermedades
- Medicina y salud
- Problemas sociales y servicios a grupos
Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible:
- ODS 3: Salud y bienestar
- ODS 12: Producción y consumo responsables
- ODS 8: Trabajo decente y crecimiento económico