Journal article icon

Journal article

Mortality among male anaesthetists in the United Kingdom, 1957-83.

Abstract:
A cohort of 3769 male anaesthetists resident in the United Kingdom between 1957 and 1983 was followed up for a total of 51,431 person years of observation. All subjects were fellows of the Faculty of Anaesthetists and held full registration with the General Medical Council. With all men in social class I being taken as the standard, the standardised mortality ratio among anaesthetists for all causes of death was 68 (95% confidence interval 59 to 77) and the standardised mortality ratio for all cancers was 50 (95% confidence interval 36 to 67). There was no significant excess mortality from lymphomas or leukaemias, but 16 of the 221 deaths in anaesthetists were due to suicide, giving a standardised mortality ratio of 202 (95% confidence interval 115 to 328). When anaesthetists were compared with all doctors the standardised mortality ratio for suicide was only 114, a nonsignificant excess. These findings confirm that the risk of suicide among anaesthetists is twice as high as among other men in social class I but suggest that the risk does not differ significantly from that among doctors as a whole. There was no evidence of a significant excess risk of cancer, and, in particular, the small excess of cancer of the pancreas reported previously could not be confirmed.

Actions

Authors

More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Department:
Oxford
Role:
Author


Journal:
British medical journal (Clinical research ed.) More from this journal
Volume:
295
Issue:
6594
Pages:
360-362
Publication date:
1987-08-01
ISSN:
0267-0623


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:72846
UUID:
uuid:1c1ea4c8-ed55-46c9-b702-bd572a745e2a
Local pid:
pubs:72846
Source identifiers:
72846
Deposit date:
2012-12-19
ARK identifier:

Terms of use


Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP