Publication | Closed Access
Comparison of crude and smoking-adjusted standardized mortality ratios.
47
Citations
5
References
1985
Year
Tobacco ControlPreventive MedicineOccupational Lung DiseasesHealth EconomicsTobacco UseEpidemiology Of CancerClinical EpidemiologySmoking Related Lung DiseasePublic HealthMedicineOccupational EpidemiologyRelative RisksLung CancerEpidemiologyU.s. Veterans
To systematically evaluate bias in estimating relative risks associated with occupational exposures obtained in the absence of smoking data, the authors compared crude and smoking-adjusted standardized mortality ratios for selected occupations using data from a study of U.S. veterans. Crude and smoking-adjusted SMRs were highly correlated: lung cancer (r = .88), bladder cancer (r = .98), and intestinal cancer (r = .97). Greater differences occurred for lung cancer, which is more strongly related to smoking than bladder or intestinal cancer.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1