Full Text View
Tabular View
No Study Results Posted
Related Studies
Occupation and Asthma in an Urban Low Income Population
This study has been completed.
Study NCT00014820   Information provided by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
First Received: April 11, 2001   Last Updated: June 23, 2005   History of Changes
This Tabular View shows the required WHO registration data elements as marked by

April 11, 2001
June 23, 2005
March 2001
 
 
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00014820 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
 
 
 
Occupation and Asthma in an Urban Low Income Population
 

To study work-related asthma in a low-income, urban population.

BACKGROUND:

Work-related asthma is asthma that is attributable to, or is made worse by, environmental exposures in the workplace. Published estimates of the proportion of adult asthma attributable to occupational factors have varied widely, depending on population, methodology, and definitions, from 2 percent to 33 percent. Occupational asthma is of great public health importance because it is potentially preventable, can cause substantial disability, and in some cases is completely curable. Among adults in the United States, asthma has become a major public health problem, with rates most elevated among low income, urban, African American and Latino sectors of the population, and with substantial evidence suggesting potential occupational contributions to the excess rates. These important sectors of the U.S. population have, however, been inadequately represented in the occupational asthma research literature.

DESIGN NARRATIVE:

This was a case control study of physician-diagnosed asthma, occupation, industry, and workplace environmental exposures designed to evaluate the hypothesis that a substantial component of the asthma burden in a low income, urban, largely minority population was due to occupational factors. The study design addressed a variety of methodologic challenges including healthy worker effects, difficulty contacting and recruiting this potentially high risk population, large numbers of potential etiologic agents, mixed exposures, small workplaces, and low absolute incidence of occupational asthma.

The study population was the catchment population of Bellevue Hospital, a general hospital in lower Manhattan, New York City, with busy ambulatory care services that serve low income working communities. Cases and controls were recruited from among outpatients and inpatients at Bellevue Hospital and interviewed face-to-face or by telephone. Occupation, industry, and occupational exposures were determined by questionnaire supplemented by a Job Exposure Matrix. Odds ratios (ORs) of association between asthma and specific industrial, occupational, and exposure categories, controlled for major confounders, were estimated. The ORs were used to calculate occupation- and industry-specific Attributable Fractions, and an overall Population Attributable Fraction of asthma attributable to occupational factors. New onset occupational asthma and work-aggravated asthma were investigated separately.

 
Observational
Natural History, Case Control
  • Asthma
  • Lung Diseases
 
 
 

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by National Clinical Trials Identifier (NCT ID) in Medline.
 
Completed
 
February 2005
 

No eligibility criteria

Male
 
No
 
 
 
 
NCT00014820
 
 
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
 
Investigator: George Friedman-Jimenez New York University School of Medicine
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
December 2004

 †    Required WHO trial registration data element.
††   WHO trial registration data element that is required only if it exists.