

Author: Batty G. Gunnell David Langenberg Claudia Smith George Marmot Michael Shipley Martin
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
ISSN: 0393-2990
Source: European Journal of Epidemiology, Vol.21, Iss.11, 2006-11, pp. : 795-801
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Abstract
Pulmonary function and height may be regarded as adult indices of exposures accumulated across the entire life course and in early life, respectively. As such, we hypothesised that pulmonary function would be more strongly related to mortality than height. Studies of the association of height and lung function with mortality – which are currently modest in number – will clarify the relative utility of these risk indices and the mechanisms underlying observed patterns of disease risk.Data were drawn from the Whitehall study, a prospective cohort study of 18,403 middle-aged non-industrial London-based male government employees conducted in the late 1960s. Data were collected on stature, spirometry measures (including forced expiratory volume in one second [FEV1]) and a range of covariates. These analyses are based on the 3083 non-smoking men with complete data.Mortality ascribed to all-causes, cardiovascular disease, respiratory disease and site-specific cancers.Both height and FEV1 were associated with a range of physiological, behavioural and socio-economic risk factors. Relations with these risk factors were seen more frequently for FEV1 and, where they occurred, were of somewhat higher magnitude. During a maximum of 35 years follow-up, half the non-smokers had died (
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