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Mortality experience of glass fibre workers.
Journal article

Mortality experience of glass fibre workers.

Abstract

A historical prospective mortality study was conducted at an insulating wool plant in Ontario, Canada, on 2576 men who had worked for at least 90 days and were employed between 1955 and 1977. Eighty eight deaths were found in the 97.2% of men traced. Mortality was compared by the person-years method with that of the Ontario population. Measurements taken since 1977 show very low fibre concentrations. The overall standardised mortality ratio (SMR) was 78%, significantly below 100. Among plant only employees, seven deaths were attributed to lung cancer compared with 4.22 expected, a non-significant excess (SMR = 166; 95% confidence limits 67 to 342). No confirmed cases of mesothelioma were observed and no other disease was significantly increased in plant workers.

Authors

Shannon HS; Hayes M; Julian JA; Muir DC

Journal

Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Vol. 41, No. 1,

Publisher

BMJ

Publication Date

February 1, 1984

DOI

10.1136/oem.41.1.35

ISSN

1351-0711

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