Park Robert M, Ahn Yeon-Soon, Stayner Leslie T, Kang Seong-Kyu, Jang Jae-Kil
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, Ohio 45226, USA.
Am J Ind Med. 2005 Sep;48(3):194-204. doi: 10.1002/ajim.20197.
The mortality experience of iron and steel workers from modern plants in developing countries has not been extensively described.
Mortality at two Korean iron and steel manufacturing complexes was analyzed using Poisson regression methods with both direct and indirect standardization. Work histories were linked with a national mortality registry. Workers (44,974) hired beginning in 1968 were followed from 1992 to 2001.
The 806 deaths observed during 10 years of follow-up comprised 2% of the population at risk and represented a large healthy worker effect (HWE) for all causes (SMR = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.55-0.63) and for cancer (SMR = 0.79, 95% CI = 0.70-0.90). Mortality at subsidiaries was considerably higher than at the parent plants (SRR = 1.71, 95% CI = 1.47-1.99). Relative mortality rates declined with employment duration: > 20 years had significantly reduced mortality (SRR = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.43-0.82) compared to duration < 1 year (test for trend: P = 0.0006). Fatal injury deaths in the first year were highly elevated (SMR = 3.10, 95% CI = 2.17-4.26) declining to less than that expected after 5 years. Cancer mortality was elevated in stainless steel production (SRR = 3.26, 95% CI = 1.37-6.49) and overall mortality was elevated for work in plant maintenance departments (SRR = 1.17, 95% CI = 1.00-1.37), particularly for fatal injuries (SRR = 1.67, 95% CI = 1.29-2.14). All-cause mortality increased with employment duration in the steel-production departments, as did fatal injuries in material handling/construction.
This steelworker cohort exhibits excess mortality in some process areas. More detailed retrospective exposure assessment and future follow-up of this cohort will better define health risks in the modern iron and steel manufacturing.
发展中国家现代工厂钢铁工人的死亡率情况尚未得到广泛描述。
采用泊松回归方法,通过直接标准化和间接标准化分析了韩国两家钢铁制造企业的死亡率。工作经历与国家死亡率登记处相关联。对1968年起雇佣的44974名工人进行了1992年至2001年的随访。
在10年随访期间观察到的806例死亡占风险人群的2%,显示出所有原因导致的较大健康工人效应(HWE)(标准化死亡比[SMR]=0.59,95%可信区间[CI]=0.55 - 0.63)以及癌症导致的健康工人效应(SMR = 0.79,95% CI = 0.70 - 0.90)。子公司的死亡率显著高于母公司(标准化相对危险度[SRR]=1.71,95% CI = 1.47 - 1.99)。相对死亡率随就业时长下降:与就业时长小于1年相比,就业超过20年的死亡率显著降低(SRR = 0.59,95% CI = 0.43 - 0.82)(趋势检验:P = 0.0006)。第一年的致命伤害死亡人数大幅升高(SMR = 3.10,95% CI = 2.17 - 4.26),5年后降至低于预期水平。不锈钢生产中的癌症死亡率升高(SRR = 3.26,95% CI = 1.37 - 6.49),工厂维修部门工作的总体死亡率升高(SRR = 1.17,95% CI = 1.00 - 1.37),尤其是致命伤害(SRR = 1.67,95% CI = 1.29 - 2.14)。钢铁生产部门的全因死亡率随就业时长增加,物料搬运/建筑中的致命伤害情况也是如此。
该钢铁工人群体在某些工艺领域表现出超额死亡率。对该群体进行更详细的回顾性暴露评估和未来随访将更好地确定现代钢铁制造中的健康风险。