Publication | Open Access
Occupational dust or gas exposure and prevalences of respiratory symptoms and asthma in a general population
104
Citations
16
References
1991
Year
AsthmaAir QualityChronic CoughQuartz ExposureGeneral PopulationIndoor AerosolRespiratory ToxicologyEnvironmental HealthOccupational DiseasePublic HealthOccupational Lung DiseasesAllergyHuman ExposureGas ExposureOccupational DustOccupational EpidemiologyEpidemiologyInhalation ToxicologyGlobal HealthAir PollutionMedicineOccupational Airborne Exposure
The relationship of occupational airborne, exposure to respiratory symptoms and asthma was examined using a self-administered questionnaire in a cross-sectional survey of a random sample (n = 4,992 subjects) of the general population aged 15-70 yrs of Hordaland county, Norway. The response rate was 90%. Twenty nine percent of the population had a history of occupational dust or gas exposure, 5% reported having been exposed to asbestos at work, and 4% reported quartz exposure. A history of occupational dust or gas exposure was associated with morning cough, chronic cough, phlegm when coughing, breathlessness on exercise, occasional wheezing and a physician's diagnosis of asthma after adjusting for sex, age, smoking habits and urban-rural area of residence. The adjusted relative odds ratios for the respiratory disorders in subjects exposed to dust or gas ranged from 1.6-1.9. The population attributable risk of occupational dust or gas exposure for the respiratory disorders ranged from 11-19%. The study indicates that respiratory disorders are independently associated with occupational airborne exposure in a Norwegian general population sample.
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