학술논문

Relationship between lung cancer and distance of residence from nonferrous smelter stack effluent
Document Type
Journal Article
Author
Source
Am. J. Ind. Med.; (United States); 2:1
Subject
63 RADIATION, THERMAL, AND OTHER ENVIRON. POLLUTANT EFFECTS ON LIVING ORGS. AND BIOL. MAT.
99 GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS//MATHEMATICS, COMPUTING, AND INFORMATION SCIENCE
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES CARCINOMAS
EPIDEMIOLOGY
METAL INDUSTRY
ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
PARTICULATES
HEALTH HAZARDS
AIR POLLUTION
HUMAN POPULATIONS
LUNGS
PATIENTS
REGIONAL ANALYSIS
SMELTERS
BODY
DISEASES
HAZARDS
INDUSTRY
NEOPLASMS
ORGANS
PARTICLES
POLLUTION
POPULATIONS
RESPIRATORY SYSTEM 560306* -- Chemicals Metabolism & Toxicology-- Man-- (-1987)
552000 -- Public Health
500200 -- Environment, Atmospheric-- Chemicals Monitoring & Transport-- (-1989)
Language
English
Abstract
Because of a reported association between residence in counties with nonferrous smelters and increased risk of lung cancer, we studied the relationship between distance of residence from nonferrous smelters and lung cancer. Patients with lung cancer and patients with other cancers not known to be associated with smelter effluent (breast, prostate, and colon) were compared. All patients lived within a 20-kilometer radius around one of 10 nonferrous smelters in five western states during 1970-1977. Data were obtained from cancer registries or death certificates and were examined separately for each area. Addresses at the time of diagnosis or death were plotted on U.S. Geological Survey maps to calculate distance from each smelter. The distribution of lung cancer near the smelters was not significantly different from the distribution of control cancers in any of the areas studied.