Dimich-Ward H, Bates D V
Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Am J Ind Med. 1994 May;25(5):613-23. doi: 10.1002/ajim.4700250502.
Multiple methods of statistical analysis were applied on data collected on 384 coal miners from the Lorraine region of France. Despite the irregularity of timing of visits over the follow-up period, similar estimates of decline resulted irrespective of the statistical method used. Deceased smokers showed the highest rates of decline in forced expiratory volume during 1 second (FEV1) of 65 to 72 ml/yr, whereas the alive non-smokers had the lowest decline estimates of 42 to 48 ml/yr. Estimates of FVC decline were found to parallel those of FEV1. For about one-half of the cohort, data were available to compare FEV1 decline before and after retirement using a profile analysis. Based upon a "differencing" method of regression, retirement from the coal mine had the effect of decreasing the rate of decline for those who had never smoked; smokers, however, showed an increasing rate of decline.