Review
How is sex considered in recent epidemiological publications on
occupational risks?
Isabelle Niedhammera, Marie-Josèphe Saurel-Cubizollesb, Michèle Piciottia, Sébastien Bonenfanta
a INSERM U88,
Hôpital National de Saint-Maurice, 14 rue du Val d'Osne, F-94415
Saint-Maurice Cedex, France, b INSERM Unit 149, Villejuif, France
Correspondence to: Dr I Niedhammer i.niedhammer{at}st-maurice.inserm.fr
Accepted 17 March 2000
OBJECTIVES
Although
women account for almost half the working population in industrialised
countries, a sex bias persists in publications on medical research in
general and occupational health in particular. The objective was to
review recent publications on how sex is considered in epidemiological
studies of occupational health, and to answer the following questions:
are men and women studied equally, what are the respective
characteristics of the studies which comprise only men, only women, and
both, and what strategy of data analysis is chosen by the authors to
take account of the sex factor in mixed studies.
MATERIALS
This review was based on
publications in six journals during the year 1997, and included all the
original articles reporting an epidemiological study of occupational health.
RESULTS
In all, 348 articles were reviewed. In 40 articles (11%), the sex of the study
population was not specified. In 177 articles (51%), the study
population was mixed. In 108 (31%), the population consisted
exclusively of men, and in only 23 (7%), exclusively of women. Even
when study populations were mixed, they included fewer women than men.
The sex composition of the population was related to the occupational
risk factor considered, and also to health outcome. Industrial sector
workers, and exposure to chemicals were more likely to be studied in
samples of men. Mortality and health outcomes such as neoplasms and
cardiovascular diseases were also more often studied among men.
Surprisingly, study design differed significantly according to the sex
of the population, and prospective studies, cohort studies, and exposed
versus non-exposed studies were more often carried out in samples of
men. Among the 177 mixed studies, sex was not investigated in over a
quarter (27%). In 26 articles (15%), sex was not taken into account,
but the authors attempted to justify this decision. In 46 mixed studies (26%), the results were adjusted for sex, and in 46 (26%), the authors gave separate results for men and women. In 11 studies (6%),
more complete strategies of data analysis were chosen, including research for interactions or adjustment, followed by stratification.
CONCLUSION
This review
of recent publications in occupational health epidemiology showed that
women are still less often studied than men, and that the sex factor is
not investigated in many mixed studies. The results therefore underline
the need for further research on occupational hazards among women, and
on sex differences.
Keywords: review; epidemiology; occupational health; sex bias
© 2000 by Occupational and Environmental Medicine
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