McCarron P, Smith G D, Okasha M, McEwen J
Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, UK.
Public Health. 1999 Nov;113(6):265-71. doi: 10.1016/S0033-3506(99)00178-X.
Evidence for the relationship between exposures in fetal life, infancy, childhood and early adulthood, and risk of chronic disease in later middle-age continues to accumulate. Further understanding of the associations between exposures acting over the life course and current morbidity and mortality in middle-age and later must depend upon the follow-up of previously established cohorts. This paper describes the design of, and background to, a follow-up of individuals who participated in a survey of student health in the University of Glasgow between 1948 and 1968. 15 332 students, almost a quarter of whom were female, had detailed medical information collected from a doctor-administered questionnaire and physical examination. Participation was voluntary; approximately 50% of the student population took part and these students were rep-resentative of the entire student population. Data collected include: socio-demographic, behavioural, developmental, anthropometric, and clinical details, as well as details of medical history and family health and structure. Data are over 95% complete for most variables. Over 40% of students were examined on two or more occasions with 1026 students (6.8%) having four or more examinations. Over 90% of students were from social classes I-III. Eighty-two per cent (12 533/15 322) of the students have been traced and flagged through the National Health Service Central Register and attempts are on-going to increase this figure. Those study members who have been traced are representative of the original cohort. To date 1111 (7.2%) of those traced have died. These data constitute a unique record of the health and physical development of a large cohort of students from Glasgow. Follow-up to investigate the relationship between indices of health and development, (height, weight, blood pressure), health behaviours and social circumstances in childhood and young adulthood, and mortality and morbidity in later adulthood is under way.
胎儿期、婴儿期、儿童期和成年早期的暴露因素与中年后期慢性病风险之间关系的证据不断积累。要进一步了解生命过程中的暴露因素与中年及以后的当前发病率和死亡率之间的关联,必须依赖于对先前建立的队列进行随访。本文描述了对1948年至1968年间参加格拉斯哥大学学生健康调查的个体进行随访的设计和背景。15332名学生(其中近四分之一为女性)通过医生填写的问卷和体格检查收集了详细的医疗信息。参与是自愿的;约50%的学生群体参与了调查,这些学生代表了整个学生群体。收集的数据包括:社会人口统计学、行为、发育、人体测量和临床细节,以及病史、家庭健康和结构细节。大多数变量的数据完整性超过95%。超过40%的学生接受了两次或更多次检查,1026名学生(6.8%)接受了四次或更多次检查。超过90%的学生来自社会阶层I-III。82%(12533/15322)的学生已通过国家卫生服务中央登记处进行追踪并标记,目前正在努力提高这一比例。那些被追踪到的研究成员代表了原始队列。迄今为止,已追踪到的成员中有1111人(7.2%)死亡。这些数据构成了一大群格拉斯哥学生健康和身体发育的独特记录。正在进行随访研究,以调查儿童期和青年期的健康与发育指标(身高、体重、血压)、健康行为和社会环境与成年后期的死亡率和发病率之间的关系。