Baris D, Armstrong B G, Deadman J, Thériault G
Department of Occupational Health, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, Montréal, Canada.
Occup Environ Med. 1996 Jan;53(1):25-31. doi: 10.1136/oem.53.1.25.
The objective of this study was to investigate the mortality of electrical utility workers exposed to electric and magnetic fields.
A historical cohort mortality study was carried out on 21,744 workers who were employed in an electrical company in the province of Québec between 1970 and 1988. The last job held by each study subject was coded. A job exposure matrix (JEM) was used to estimate the exposure to 60 Hz electric and magnetic fields, and pulsed electromagnetic fields (as recorded by the PEMF (POSITRON) meter) in this job. Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) were calculated relative to Québec men. Because the exposure was exclusively among blue collar workers, the remainder of the analyses by exposure were restricted to them. Rate ratios (RRs) in the exposed groups relative to the background groups were estimated with Poisson regression. There were 1582 deaths by the end of follow up.
SMRs were almost all below one and never substantially increased, although there were a few increased rate ratios (RRs). There was a significant RR of 2.00 (95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.37-2.93) for deaths caused by accidents and violence in workers exposed to magnetic fields, RR of 1.82 (95% CI 1.25-2.65) for electric fields, and RR of 1.62 (95% CI 1.13-2.32) for pulsed electromagnetic fields. Occupational accidents related to power lines explain some of the excess of deaths from accidents and violence. Some association was found between magnetic fields and leukaemia, brain cancer, and suicide, between electric fields and brain cancer and suicide, and between pulsed electromagnetic fields and lung cancer, but these were not significant.
These results are broadly reassuring that major causes of death are not strongly associated with exposure to electric and magnetic fields, but small numbers and approximate exposure assessments preclude the denial of any risk, in particular if it were to affect a rare cause of death.
本研究的目的是调查暴露于电场和磁场的电力公司工人的死亡率。
对1970年至1988年期间受雇于魁北克省一家电力公司的21744名工人进行了一项历史性队列死亡率研究。对每个研究对象的最后一份工作进行了编码。使用工作暴露矩阵(JEM)来估计该工作中60赫兹电场和磁场以及脉冲电磁场(由PEMF(正电子)仪记录)的暴露情况。相对于魁北克男性计算标准化死亡率(SMR)。由于暴露仅发生在蓝领工人中,因此按暴露情况进行的其余分析仅限于他们。通过泊松回归估计暴露组相对于背景组的率比(RR)。随访结束时共有1582人死亡。
几乎所有的标准化死亡率都低于1,并且从未大幅上升,尽管有一些率比有所增加。暴露于磁场的工人因事故和暴力导致的死亡的显著率比为2.00(95%置信区间(95%CI)1.37 - 2.93),电场导致的死亡的率比为1.82(95%CI 1.25 - 2.65),脉冲电磁场导致的死亡的率比为1.62(95%CI 1.13 - 2.32)。与输电线相关的职业事故解释了一些事故和暴力导致的死亡过剩情况。在磁场与白血病、脑癌和自杀之间,电场与脑癌和自杀之间,以及脉冲电磁场与肺癌之间发现了一些关联,但这些都不显著。
这些结果大体上令人放心,即主要死因与暴露于电场和磁场没有强烈关联,但由于样本数量少和暴露评估近似,不能排除任何风险,特别是如果它影响到罕见的死因。