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Work-related mortality in England and Wales 1979-2000

Work-related mortality in England and Wales 1979-2000
Work-related mortality in England and Wales 1979-2000
Background: To explore time trends in deaths attributable to work in England and Wales, and identify priorities for prevention, we conducted a proportional analysis of mortality by occupation over a 22-year period.

Methods: Analysis was based on deaths in men aged 20–74 years during 1979–1980 and 1982–2000 with a recorded occupation. Proportional mortality ratios, standardised for age and social class, were calculated for pre-specified combinations of occupation and cause of death, for which excess mortality could reasonably be attributed to work. Differences between observed and expected numbers of deaths by cause and occupation were expressed as annual excess death rates.

Results: Mortality attributable to work declined substantially over the period of study, with total excess death rates of 733.2 per year during 1979–1990 and 471.7 per year during 1991–2000. The largest contributing hazards were chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and pneumoconiosis in coal miners, pleural cancer from asbestos, and motor vehicle accidents in lorry drivers. In contrast to most other hazards, there was no clear decline in excess mortality attributable to asbestos, or in deaths from sino-nasal cancer associated with exposure to wood dust.


Conclusions: The overall decline in mortality attributable to work is likely to reflect reduced employment in more hazardous occupations, as well as improvements in working conditions. It is imperative to ensure that occupational exposures to asbestos and wood dust are now adequately controlled. Further research is needed on accidents involving lorries with the aim of developing more effective strategies for the prevention of injury.

1351-0711
816-822
Coggon, David
2b43ce0a-cc61-4d86-b15d-794208ffa5d3
Harris, E.C.
3e4bd946-3f09-45a1-8725-d35e80dd7971
Brown, T.
65b220ab-5839-4e03-b923-97694339baaf
Rice, S.
df8be5fd-d343-4379-9487-318581b6630b
Palmer, K.T.
0cfe63f0-1d33-40ff-ae8c-6c33601df850
Coggon, David
2b43ce0a-cc61-4d86-b15d-794208ffa5d3
Harris, E.C.
3e4bd946-3f09-45a1-8725-d35e80dd7971
Brown, T.
65b220ab-5839-4e03-b923-97694339baaf
Rice, S.
df8be5fd-d343-4379-9487-318581b6630b
Palmer, K.T.
0cfe63f0-1d33-40ff-ae8c-6c33601df850

Coggon, David, Harris, E.C., Brown, T., Rice, S. and Palmer, K.T. (2010) Work-related mortality in England and Wales 1979-2000. Occupational & Environmental Medicine, 67 (12), 816-822. (doi:10.1136/oem2009.052670). (PMID:20573846)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: To explore time trends in deaths attributable to work in England and Wales, and identify priorities for prevention, we conducted a proportional analysis of mortality by occupation over a 22-year period.

Methods: Analysis was based on deaths in men aged 20–74 years during 1979–1980 and 1982–2000 with a recorded occupation. Proportional mortality ratios, standardised for age and social class, were calculated for pre-specified combinations of occupation and cause of death, for which excess mortality could reasonably be attributed to work. Differences between observed and expected numbers of deaths by cause and occupation were expressed as annual excess death rates.

Results: Mortality attributable to work declined substantially over the period of study, with total excess death rates of 733.2 per year during 1979–1990 and 471.7 per year during 1991–2000. The largest contributing hazards were chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and pneumoconiosis in coal miners, pleural cancer from asbestos, and motor vehicle accidents in lorry drivers. In contrast to most other hazards, there was no clear decline in excess mortality attributable to asbestos, or in deaths from sino-nasal cancer associated with exposure to wood dust.


Conclusions: The overall decline in mortality attributable to work is likely to reflect reduced employment in more hazardous occupations, as well as improvements in working conditions. It is imperative to ensure that occupational exposures to asbestos and wood dust are now adequately controlled. Further research is needed on accidents involving lorries with the aim of developing more effective strategies for the prevention of injury.

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Published date: December 2010
Organisations: Dev Origins of Health & Disease

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 73111
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/73111
ISSN: 1351-0711
PURE UUID: 79585d71-43ea-4d71-a4e5-d68781c7e0b2
ORCID for David Coggon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1930-3987
ORCID for E.C. Harris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8037-566X

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Date deposited: 03 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:39

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Contributors

Author: David Coggon ORCID iD
Author: E.C. Harris ORCID iD
Author: T. Brown
Author: S. Rice
Author: K.T. Palmer

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