7 research outputs found

    Effect and 95% CIs of a 10-μg/m increase in air pollution on death using a Cox proportional hazards model with a second-degree polynomial–distributed lag model, adjusted for meteorologic variables

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    <p><b>Copyright information:</b></p><p>Taken from "Survival Analysis to Estimate Association between Short-Term Mortality and Air Pollution"</p><p>Environmental Health Perspectives 2005;114(2):242-247.</p><p>Published online 3 Oct 2005</p><p>PMCID:PMC1367838.</p><p>This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original DOI.</p

    Cox proportional hazard models for the risk of all-cause deaths according to the use of hormone treatment at baseline.

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    a<p>Adjusted for age, education, recruitment centre, living situation, incapacities, comorbidity, depressive symptoms and cognitive impairment.</p>b<p>With reference to never users.</p>c<p>113 (89%) used transdermal estradiol treatment and 14 (11%) oral estradiol.</p>d<p>The 27 women who currently used other types of HT were not included in this analysis;</p

    Cox proportional hazard models<sup>a</sup> for the risk of dying associated with the use of current hormone treatment (versus non-current use) at baseline, stratified by estrogen receptor genotype.

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    a<p>This analysis was carried out on a sub-population of 4463 women for whom genotyping data was available.</p>b<p>Adjusted for age, education, living status, recruitment centre, incapacities, comorbidity, depressive symptoms and cognitive impairment.</p
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