南威尔士矿工和前矿工患和不患煤矿尘肺病的死亡率

R. Carpenter, A. Cochrane, W. G. Clarke, G. Jonathan, F. Moore, Hugh-Jones Gilson, Gilson, Higgins
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引用次数: 10

摘要

目前诊断煤矿工人尘肺病的唯一实用方法是胸片检查。然而,这种诊断仅仅表明由于接触煤尘而出现放射学异常。就其本身而言,它几乎不能告诉我们肺残疾或未来预期寿命的丧失。因此,不幸的是,在建立必要的相关性之前,即一方面,粉尘浓度,暴露时间和放射学异常出现率之间的相关性,另一方面,煤炭工人尘肺病的放射学类别,年龄,肺残疾和预期寿命损失之间的相关性,射线照相实际上已经变得如此重要,无论是关于粉尘抑制还是工业补偿。罗奇(1953)表明,粉尘浓度、时间和第一次放射异常的出现之间存在关系。和Carpenter(1956)讨论了年龄、放射学分类和肺残疾之间的关系。本文试图探讨第三种相关性——年龄、放射学分类和预期寿命之间的关系。这个问题在过去一直被医生和外行人误解。煤矿工人尘肺病的放射学变化尤其显著,一些医生倾向于将这些变化与他们更熟悉的结核病相比较来判断,有时给出的预后过于悲观。此外,人们在区分因煤矿工人尘肺病死亡的数字和因尘肺病死亡的数字方面存在可以理解的困难。对前一个数字的宣传和对后一个数字信息的缺乏,可能从死亡率的角度夸大了这种疾病的严重性。关于尘肺病对死亡率影响的文献有些有限。弗莱彻(1948)指出,与所有在职和退休男性的死亡率相比,英格兰和威尔士除结核病以外的所有呼吸系统疾病的标准化死亡率在四个时期都明显偏高。他还指出,55岁以上的煤矿工人出现了这种偏高的死亡率,并提出这种偏高的死亡率可能是由于煤矿工人尘肺病造成的。对煤矿工人尘肺病死亡率的唯一详细研究是Stewart、Davies、Dowsett、Morrell和Pierce(1948)的研究。他们跟着……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Death rates of miners and ex-miners with and without coalworkers' pneumoconiosis in South Wales
At present the only practical method by which a diagnosis of coalworkers' pneumoconiosis can be made in life is by means of chest radiographs. Such a diagnosis, however, merely signifies the presence of radiological abnormalities due to exposure to coal dust. Of itself, it can tell us little about pulmonary disability or future loss of expectation of life. It is thus unfortunate that the radiograph has become practically of such importance, both in relation to dust suppression and to industrial compensation, before the necessary correlations have been established, i.e., between dust concentration , time of exposure, and rate of appearance of radiological abnormality on the one hand, and the radiological category of coalworkers' pneumo-coniosis, age, pulmonary disability, and loss of expectation of life on the other. Roach (1953) has shown that a relationship exists between dust concentration, time, and the appearance of the first radiological abnormalities. and Carpenter (1956) discuss the relationship between age, radiological category, and pulmonary disability. This paper attempts the third of these correlations-the relationship between age, radiological category, and expectation of life. The problermi has been much misunderstood in the past amongst both doctors and laymen. The radiological changes in coalworkers' pneumoconiosis are particularly striking, and some doctors who tend to judge these changes by comparing them with tuberculosis, with which they are better acquainted, have sometimes given too gloomy a prognosis. Moreover, people have an understandable difficulty in differentiating between figures relating to those suffering from coalworkers' pneumoconiosis who die and figures relating to those who die from pneumoconiosis. The publicity given to the former figures and the lack of information about the latter have probably given an exaggerated picture of the seriousness of the disease from the point of view of mortality. The literature on the effect of pneumoconiosis on mortality is somewhat limited. Fletcher (1948) pointed out that the standardized death rates of coal-miners in England and Wales for all respiratory diseases except tuberculosis, when compared with those rates for all occupied and retired males, showed a marked excess for the four periods He also pointed out that it was the coal-miners over the age of 55 in whom this excess of deaths was seen and suggested that this excess of deaths might be due to deaths from coalworkers' pneumoconiosis. The only detailed study of death rates associated with coalworkers' pneumoconiosis is that of Stewart, Davies, Dowsett, Morrell, and Pierce (1948). They followed …
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