CANCER MORTALITY AMONG A GROUP OF FLUORSPAR MINERS EXPOSED TO RADON PROGENY

Morrison, H. I. (Laboratory Centre for Disease Control, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0L2), R. M. Semenciw, Y. Mao, and D. T. Wigle. Cancer mortality among a group of fluorspar miners exposed to radon progeny. Am J Epidemiol 1988; 128:1266–75. A cohort study of the mortality experience (1950–1984) of...

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Main Authors: MORRISON, HOWARD I., SEMENCIW, ROBERT M., MAO, YANG, WIGLE, DONALD T.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1988
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Online Access:http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/128/6/1266
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spelling fthighwire:oai:open-archive.highwire.org:amjepid:128/6/1266 2023-05-15T17:22:33+02:00 CANCER MORTALITY AMONG A GROUP OF FLUORSPAR MINERS EXPOSED TO RADON PROGENY MORRISON, HOWARD I. SEMENCIW, ROBERT M. MAO, YANG WIGLE, DONALD T. 1988-12-01 00:00:00.0 text/html http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/128/6/1266 en eng Oxford University Press http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/128/6/1266 Copyright (C) 1988, Oxford University Press ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTIONS TEXT 1988 fthighwire 2007-06-24T03:23:10Z Morrison, H. I. (Laboratory Centre for Disease Control, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0L2), R. M. Semenciw, Y. Mao, and D. T. Wigle. Cancer mortality among a group of fluorspar miners exposed to radon progeny. Am J Epidemiol 1988; 128:1266–75. A cohort study of the mortality experience (1950–1984) of 1,772 Newfoundland underground fluorspar miners occupationally exposed to high levels of radon daughters (mean dose = 382.8 working levels months) has been conducted. Observed numbers of cancers of the lung, salivary gland, and buccal cavity and pharynx were significantly elevated among these miners. A highly significant relation was noted between radon daughter exposure and risk of dying of lung cancer; the small numbers of salivary gland ( n = 2) and buccal cavity and pharynx ( n = 6) cancers precluded meaningful analysis of dose response. Attributable and relative risk coefficients for lung cancer were estimated as 6.3 deaths per working level month per million person-years and 0.9% per working level month, respectively. Relative risk coefficients were highest for those first exposed before age 20 years. Cigarette smokers had relative and attributable risk coefficients comparable to those of nonsmokers. Relative risks fell sharply with age, whereas attributable risks were lowest in the youngest and oldest age groups. The results suggest that efforts to raise existing occupational exposure standards may be inappropriate. Text Newfoundland HighWire Press (Stanford University) Canada Morrison ENVELOPE(-63.533,-63.533,-66.167,-66.167)
institution Open Polar
collection HighWire Press (Stanford University)
op_collection_id fthighwire
language English
topic ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTIONS
spellingShingle ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTIONS
MORRISON, HOWARD I.
SEMENCIW, ROBERT M.
MAO, YANG
WIGLE, DONALD T.
CANCER MORTALITY AMONG A GROUP OF FLUORSPAR MINERS EXPOSED TO RADON PROGENY
topic_facet ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTIONS
description Morrison, H. I. (Laboratory Centre for Disease Control, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0L2), R. M. Semenciw, Y. Mao, and D. T. Wigle. Cancer mortality among a group of fluorspar miners exposed to radon progeny. Am J Epidemiol 1988; 128:1266–75. A cohort study of the mortality experience (1950–1984) of 1,772 Newfoundland underground fluorspar miners occupationally exposed to high levels of radon daughters (mean dose = 382.8 working levels months) has been conducted. Observed numbers of cancers of the lung, salivary gland, and buccal cavity and pharynx were significantly elevated among these miners. A highly significant relation was noted between radon daughter exposure and risk of dying of lung cancer; the small numbers of salivary gland ( n = 2) and buccal cavity and pharynx ( n = 6) cancers precluded meaningful analysis of dose response. Attributable and relative risk coefficients for lung cancer were estimated as 6.3 deaths per working level month per million person-years and 0.9% per working level month, respectively. Relative risk coefficients were highest for those first exposed before age 20 years. Cigarette smokers had relative and attributable risk coefficients comparable to those of nonsmokers. Relative risks fell sharply with age, whereas attributable risks were lowest in the youngest and oldest age groups. The results suggest that efforts to raise existing occupational exposure standards may be inappropriate.
format Text
author MORRISON, HOWARD I.
SEMENCIW, ROBERT M.
MAO, YANG
WIGLE, DONALD T.
author_facet MORRISON, HOWARD I.
SEMENCIW, ROBERT M.
MAO, YANG
WIGLE, DONALD T.
author_sort MORRISON, HOWARD I.
title CANCER MORTALITY AMONG A GROUP OF FLUORSPAR MINERS EXPOSED TO RADON PROGENY
title_short CANCER MORTALITY AMONG A GROUP OF FLUORSPAR MINERS EXPOSED TO RADON PROGENY
title_full CANCER MORTALITY AMONG A GROUP OF FLUORSPAR MINERS EXPOSED TO RADON PROGENY
title_fullStr CANCER MORTALITY AMONG A GROUP OF FLUORSPAR MINERS EXPOSED TO RADON PROGENY
title_full_unstemmed CANCER MORTALITY AMONG A GROUP OF FLUORSPAR MINERS EXPOSED TO RADON PROGENY
title_sort cancer mortality among a group of fluorspar miners exposed to radon progeny
publisher Oxford University Press
publishDate 1988
url http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/128/6/1266
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.533,-63.533,-66.167,-66.167)
geographic Canada
Morrison
geographic_facet Canada
Morrison
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/128/6/1266
op_rights Copyright (C) 1988, Oxford University Press
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