La maladie de Parkinson au Canada (serveur d'exploration)

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Parkinson's Disease and Occupation: Differences in Associations by Case Identification Method Suggest Referral Bias

Identifieur interne : 000024 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000023; suivant : 000025

Parkinson's Disease and Occupation: Differences in Associations by Case Identification Method Suggest Referral Bias

Auteurs : Kay Teschke ; Stephen A. Marion ; Joseph K. C. Tsui ; HUI SHEN ; Kathrine Rugbjerg ; M. Anne Harris

Source :

RBID : Pascal:14-0138601

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

Methods We used a population-based sample of 403 Parkinson's disease cases and 405 controls to examine risks by occupation. Results were compared to a previous clinic-based analysis. Results With censoring of jobs held within 10 years of diagnosis, the following had significantly or strongly increased risks: social science, law and library jobs (OR = 1.8); farming and horticulture jobs (OR = 2.0); gas station jobs (OR = 2.6); and welders (OR = 3.0). The following had significantly decreased risks: management and administration jobs (OR = 0.70); and other health care jobs (OR = 0.44). Conclusions These results were consistent with other findings for social science and farming occupations. Risks for teaching, medicine and health occupations were not elevated, unlike our previous clinic-based study. This underscores the value of population-based over clinic-based samples. Occupational studies may be particularly susceptible to referral bias because social networks may spread preferentially via jobs.

Notice en format standard (ISO 2709)

Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.

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A08 01  1  ENG  @1 Parkinson's Disease and Occupation: Differences in Associations by Case Identification Method Suggest Referral Bias
A11 01  1    @1 TESCHKE (Kay)
A11 02  1    @1 MARION (Stephen A.)
A11 03  1    @1 TSUI (Joseph K. C.)
A11 04  1    @1 HUI SHEN
A11 05  1    @1 RUGBJERG (Kathrine)
A11 06  1    @1 HARRIS (M. Anne)
A14 01      @1 School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia @2 Vancouver, British Columbia @3 CAN @Z 1 aut. @Z 2 aut. @Z 4 aut. @Z 5 aut. @Z 6 aut.
A14 02      @1 Pacific Parkinson's Research Centre, University of British Columbia @2 Vancouver, British Columbia @3 CAN @Z 3 aut.
A14 03      @1 Danish Cancer Society Research Center @2 Copenhagen @3 DNK @Z 5 aut.
A14 04      @1 School of Occupational and Public Health, Ryerson University @2 Toronto, Ontario @3 CAN @Z 6 aut.
A20       @1 163-171
A21       @1 2014
A23 01      @0 ENG
A43 01      @1 INIST @2 18343 @5 354000506156250040
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A47 01  1    @0 14-0138601
A60       @1 P
A61       @0 A
A64 01  1    @0 American journal of industrial medicine
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C01 01    ENG  @0 Methods We used a population-based sample of 403 Parkinson's disease cases and 405 controls to examine risks by occupation. Results were compared to a previous clinic-based analysis. Results With censoring of jobs held within 10 years of diagnosis, the following had significantly or strongly increased risks: social science, law and library jobs (OR = 1.8); farming and horticulture jobs (OR = 2.0); gas station jobs (OR = 2.6); and welders (OR = 3.0). The following had significantly decreased risks: management and administration jobs (OR = 0.70); and other health care jobs (OR = 0.44). Conclusions These results were consistent with other findings for social science and farming occupations. Risks for teaching, medicine and health occupations were not elevated, unlike our previous clinic-based study. This underscores the value of population-based over clinic-based samples. Occupational studies may be particularly susceptible to referral bias because social networks may spread preferentially via jobs.
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Format Inist (serveur)

NO : PASCAL 14-0138601 INIST
ET : Parkinson's Disease and Occupation: Differences in Associations by Case Identification Method Suggest Referral Bias
AU : TESCHKE (Kay); MARION (Stephen A.); TSUI (Joseph K. C.); HUI SHEN; RUGBJERG (Kathrine); HARRIS (M. Anne)
AF : School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia/Vancouver, British Columbia/Canada (1 aut., 2 aut., 4 aut., 5 aut., 6 aut.); Pacific Parkinson's Research Centre, University of British Columbia/Vancouver, British Columbia/Canada (3 aut.); Danish Cancer Society Research Center/Copenhagen/Danemark (5 aut.); School of Occupational and Public Health, Ryerson University/Toronto, Ontario/Canada (6 aut.)
DT : Publication en série; Niveau analytique
SO : American journal of industrial medicine; ISSN 0271-3586; Coden AJIMD8; Etats-Unis; Da. 2014; Vol. 57; No. 2; Pp. 163-171; Bibl. 1 p.1/4
LA : Anglais
EA : Methods We used a population-based sample of 403 Parkinson's disease cases and 405 controls to examine risks by occupation. Results were compared to a previous clinic-based analysis. Results With censoring of jobs held within 10 years of diagnosis, the following had significantly or strongly increased risks: social science, law and library jobs (OR = 1.8); farming and horticulture jobs (OR = 2.0); gas station jobs (OR = 2.6); and welders (OR = 3.0). The following had significantly decreased risks: management and administration jobs (OR = 0.70); and other health care jobs (OR = 0.44). Conclusions These results were consistent with other findings for social science and farming occupations. Risks for teaching, medicine and health occupations were not elevated, unlike our previous clinic-based study. This underscores the value of population-based over clinic-based samples. Occupational studies may be particularly susceptible to referral bias because social networks may spread preferentially via jobs.
CC : 002B17G; 002B30B; 002B17A01
FD : Profession; Epidémiologie; Catégorie socioprofessionnelle; Activité professionnelle; Etude comparative; Homme; Maladie de Parkinson; Identification; Biais méthodologique; Exposition professionnelle; Médecine du travail; Critère sélection; Biais de sélection
FG : Pathologie de l'encéphale; Syndrome extrapyramidal; Maladie dégénérative; Pathologie du système nerveux central; Pathologie du système nerveux
ED : Profession; Epidemiology; Socioeconomic category; Professional activity; Comparative study; Human; Parkinson disease; Identification; Methodological bias; Occupational exposure; Occupational medicine; Selection criterion
EG : Cerebral disorder; Extrapyramidal syndrome; Degenerative disease; Central nervous system disease; Nervous system diseases
SD : Profesión; Epidemiología; Categoría socioprofesional; Actividad profesional; Estudio comparativo; Hombre; Parkinson enfermedad; Identificación; Ruta metodológica; Exposición profesional; Medicina ocupacional; Criterio selección
LO : INIST-18343.354000506156250040
ID : 14-0138601

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Pascal:14-0138601

Le document en format XML

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<s0>Methods We used a population-based sample of 403 Parkinson's disease cases and 405 controls to examine risks by occupation. Results were compared to a previous clinic-based analysis. Results With censoring of jobs held within 10 years of diagnosis, the following had significantly or strongly increased risks: social science, law and library jobs (OR = 1.8); farming and horticulture jobs (OR = 2.0); gas station jobs (OR = 2.6); and welders (OR = 3.0). The following had significantly decreased risks: management and administration jobs (OR = 0.70); and other health care jobs (OR = 0.44). Conclusions These results were consistent with other findings for social science and farming occupations. Risks for teaching, medicine and health occupations were not elevated, unlike our previous clinic-based study. This underscores the value of population-based over clinic-based samples. Occupational studies may be particularly susceptible to referral bias because social networks may spread preferentially via jobs.</s0>
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<s5>16</s5>
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<s5>62</s5>
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<s5>63</s5>
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<s5>63</s5>
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<s5>63</s5>
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<NO>PASCAL 14-0138601 INIST</NO>
<ET>Parkinson's Disease and Occupation: Differences in Associations by Case Identification Method Suggest Referral Bias</ET>
<AU>TESCHKE (Kay); MARION (Stephen A.); TSUI (Joseph K. C.); HUI SHEN; RUGBJERG (Kathrine); HARRIS (M. Anne)</AU>
<AF>School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia/Vancouver, British Columbia/Canada (1 aut., 2 aut., 4 aut., 5 aut., 6 aut.); Pacific Parkinson's Research Centre, University of British Columbia/Vancouver, British Columbia/Canada (3 aut.); Danish Cancer Society Research Center/Copenhagen/Danemark (5 aut.); School of Occupational and Public Health, Ryerson University/Toronto, Ontario/Canada (6 aut.)</AF>
<DT>Publication en série; Niveau analytique</DT>
<SO>American journal of industrial medicine; ISSN 0271-3586; Coden AJIMD8; Etats-Unis; Da. 2014; Vol. 57; No. 2; Pp. 163-171; Bibl. 1 p.1/4</SO>
<LA>Anglais</LA>
<EA>Methods We used a population-based sample of 403 Parkinson's disease cases and 405 controls to examine risks by occupation. Results were compared to a previous clinic-based analysis. Results With censoring of jobs held within 10 years of diagnosis, the following had significantly or strongly increased risks: social science, law and library jobs (OR = 1.8); farming and horticulture jobs (OR = 2.0); gas station jobs (OR = 2.6); and welders (OR = 3.0). The following had significantly decreased risks: management and administration jobs (OR = 0.70); and other health care jobs (OR = 0.44). Conclusions These results were consistent with other findings for social science and farming occupations. Risks for teaching, medicine and health occupations were not elevated, unlike our previous clinic-based study. This underscores the value of population-based over clinic-based samples. Occupational studies may be particularly susceptible to referral bias because social networks may spread preferentially via jobs.</EA>
<CC>002B17G; 002B30B; 002B17A01</CC>
<FD>Profession; Epidémiologie; Catégorie socioprofessionnelle; Activité professionnelle; Etude comparative; Homme; Maladie de Parkinson; Identification; Biais méthodologique; Exposition professionnelle; Médecine du travail; Critère sélection; Biais de sélection</FD>
<FG>Pathologie de l'encéphale; Syndrome extrapyramidal; Maladie dégénérative; Pathologie du système nerveux central; Pathologie du système nerveux</FG>
<ED>Profession; Epidemiology; Socioeconomic category; Professional activity; Comparative study; Human; Parkinson disease; Identification; Methodological bias; Occupational exposure; Occupational medicine; Selection criterion</ED>
<EG>Cerebral disorder; Extrapyramidal syndrome; Degenerative disease; Central nervous system disease; Nervous system diseases</EG>
<SD>Profesión; Epidemiología; Categoría socioprofesional; Actividad profesional; Estudio comparativo; Hombre; Parkinson enfermedad; Identificación; Ruta metodológica; Exposición profesional; Medicina ocupacional; Criterio selección</SD>
<LO>INIST-18343.354000506156250040</LO>
<ID>14-0138601</ID>
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