Kales Stefanos N, Soteriades Elpidoforos S, Christophi Costas A, Christiani David C
Cambridge Health Alliance, Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
N Engl J Med. 2007 Mar 22;356(12):1207-15. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa060357.
Heart disease causes 45% of the deaths that occur among U.S. firefighters while they are on duty. We examined duty-specific risks of death from coronary heart disease among on-duty U.S. firefighters from 1994 to 2004.
We reviewed summaries provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency of the deaths of all on-duty firefighters between 1994 and 2004, except for deaths associated with the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Estimates of the proportions of time spent by firefighters each year performing various duties were obtained from a municipal fire department, from 17 large metropolitan fire departments, and from a national database. Odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for death from coronary heart disease during specific duties were calculated from the ratios of the observed odds to the expected odds, with nonemergency duties as the reference category.
Deaths from coronary heart disease were associated with suppressing a fire (32.1% of all such deaths), responding to an alarm (13.4%), returning from an alarm (17.4%), engaging in physical training (12.5%), responding to nonfire emergencies (9.4%), and performing nonemergency duties (15.4%). As compared with the odds of death from coronary heart disease during nonemergency duties, the odds were 12.1 to 136 times as high during fire suppression, 2.8 to 14.1 times as high during alarm response, 2.2 to 10.5 times as high during alarm return, and 2.9 to 6.6 times as high during physical training. These odds were based on three estimates of the time that firefighters spend on their duties.
Certain emergency firefighting duties were associated with a risk of death from coronary heart disease that was markedly higher than the risk associated with nonemergency duties. Fire suppression was associated with the highest risk, which was approximately 10 to 100 times as high as that for nonemergency duties.
在美国,心脏病导致45%在职消防员死亡。我们研究了1994年至2004年期间美国在职消防员因冠心病死亡的特定职责风险。
我们审查了联邦紧急事务管理局提供的1994年至2004年期间所有在职消防员死亡情况的摘要,但不包括与2001年9月11日恐怖袭击相关的死亡。消防员每年执行各项职责所花费时间比例的估计值,取自一个市政消防部门、17个大型都市消防部门以及一个国家数据库。根据观察到的比值与预期比值之比,以非紧急职责为参照类别,计算特定职责期间因冠心病死亡的比值比和95%置信区间。
冠心病死亡与灭火(占所有此类死亡的32.1%)、响应警报(13.4%)、警报返回途中(17.4%)、进行体育训练(12.5%)、响应非火灾紧急情况(9.4%)以及执行非紧急职责(15.4%)有关。与非紧急职责期间因冠心病死亡的比值相比,灭火期间的比值高12.1至136倍,警报响应期间高2.8至14.1倍,警报返回途中高2.2至10.5倍,体育训练期间高2.9至6.6倍。这些比值基于对消防员履行职责时间的三种估计。
某些应急消防职责与冠心病死亡风险相关,该风险明显高于非紧急职责相关风险。灭火相关风险最高,约为非紧急职责风险的10至100倍。