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dc.contributor.authorJiang Jen_AU
dc.contributor.authorLi Jen_AU
dc.contributor.authorLiu Ben_AU
dc.contributor.authorSitas Fen_AU
dc.contributor.authorZeng Xen_AU
dc.contributor.authorChen Jen_AU
dc.contributor.authorHan Wen_AU
dc.contributor.authorZou Xen_AU
dc.contributor.authorWu Yen_AU
dc.contributor.authorZhao Pen_AU
dc.date.issued2010
dc.date.issued2010en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/30544
dc.description.abstractBACKGROUND/PURPOSE: We assessed the effect of smoking on death from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in China by employing a large population-based, case-spouse control study design using data from a nationwide survey of mortality. METHODS: During 1989-1991, a nationwide retrospective survey of mortality was conducted in China. For approximately 1,000,000 adults dying from all causes during 1986-1988, their surviving spouses or other informants provided detailed information about their own as well as the deceased person's smoking history. For this study, 183,393 individuals who died of COPD at age > or = 40 years were taken as cases, while 272,984 sex-matched surviving spouses of subjects who died from any cause were taken as controls. RESULTS: COPD death rates for smokers were more than twice as high as those of non-smokers, with a dose-response risk pattern, despite the fact that COPD death rates varied widely by region and age. Tobacco accounted for 41.4% of COPD deaths in men, but only 13.5% of those in women, who had a lower rate of smoking. CONCLUSION: A case-spouse control study, as an alternative design, is valid and feasible in utilizing information from population-based, retrospective mortality survey data for an analytical epidemiological study of disease etiologyen_AU
dc.publisherJournal of the Formosan Medical Associationen_AU
dc.subjectAdulten_AU
dc.subjectRisken_AU
dc.subjectSmokingen_AU
dc.subjectTobaccoen_AU
dc.subjectWomenen_AU
dc.subjectChinaen_AU
dc.subjectDesignen_AU
dc.subjectepidemiologyen_AU
dc.subjectetiologyen_AU
dc.subjecthistoryen_AU
dc.subjectmethodsen_AU
dc.subjectmortalityen_AU
dc.subjectResearchen_AU
dc.subject.otherEtiology - Exogenous Factors in the Origin and Cause of Canceren_AU
dc.titleCase-spouse control design in practice: an experience in estimating smoking and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease deaths in Chinese adultsen_AU
dc.typeArticleen_AU


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