Is the overall SMR a useful measure of mortality in occupational cohort studies?

Authors

  • Ånund Hobbesland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5324/nje.v9i1.447

Abstract

 

Objectives.

 

 

Methods.

 

 

ptw is presented which is the sum of the stratum specific observed/expected ratios

weighted by the person-time distribution.

Results.

 

 

ptw of 1.18 were estimated for this cohort.

Conclusions.

 

 

Traditional SMR analyses of occupational cohorts are in general influenced by the distribution

of age and active/inactive person-time. To reduce the influence of random variations in these

distributions it is proposed to perform person-time weighting of the age, employment status, and calendar

time strata. The healthy hire effect and the healthy worker survivor effect (HWSE) are the main

components of the HWE which did not decline by increasing duration of follow-up.

The proportions of person-time attributed from the highest age stratum (≥ 65 years) and the

proportions of all inactive person-time varied considerably between the populations from the 12 plants.

Among individuals aged < 65 years the overall SMRs increased by increasing proportions of inactive

person-time. The inactive person-time stratum among individuals aged 65 years or more showed an

SMR close to 1.00. The active person-time SMRs were fairly stable over increasing strata of duration

of follow-up. A traditional SMR of 1.08 and an SMR

 

A previously defined cohort of 14 730 male workers from 12 Norwegian ferroalloy plants

was studied with analyses of the overall SMR stratified by age at risk, employment status, periods of

observation and duration of follow-up. The age distribution and the proportions of active and inactive

person-time were also examined among workers from each of the 12 plants. An alternative SMR notion

designated SMR

 

This study was performed to examine the importance of the age structure of a cohort and

the impact of the healthy worker effect (HWE) on the overall standardised mortality ratio (SMR), and

to investigate the components of the HWE.

ABSTRACT

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Published

2009-10-29

How to Cite

Hobbesland, Ånund. (2009). Is the overall SMR a useful measure of mortality in occupational cohort studies?. Norsk Epidemiologi, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.5324/nje.v9i1.447