The effects of occupation-based social position on mortality in a large American cohort.
D I Gregorio,
S J Walsh and
D Paturzo
Department of Community Medicine and Health Care, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington 06030-1910, USA.
OBJECTIVES: Four occupation-based measures were used to deriveestimates of social position's effect on all-cause mortalityamong men and women in a large national cohort. METHODS: TheNational Longitudinal Mortality Study provided information onprincipal occupation and 9-year follow-up for 229,851 personsaged 25 through 64 years. Cox's proportional hazards model wasused to estimate the age-adjusted risk of death relative tosix ordinal categories of social position. The Slope Index ofInequality described average change in death rates across categories.RESULTS: Risk of death was consistently elevated among personsat lower positions in the social hierarchy. Estimates comparinglowest with highest categories varied within a narrow range(1.47-1.92 for men and 1.23-1.55 for women). However, severaldiscrepancies among analyses were noted. The analysis by UScensus groups revealed nonlinear associations, whereas thoseusing other scales found incremental increases in risk. Effectmodification by sex was observed for analyses by two of thefour measures. Race/ ethnicity did not modify the underlyingassociation between variables. CONCLUSIONS: Our analysis complementsprevious findings and supports, with few qualifications, theinterchangeability of occupation-based measures of social positionin mortality studies. Explanations for why relative risk estimateswere modified by sex are offered.
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