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. 1983 Nov;53:69–78. doi: 10.1289/ehp.835369

Effect of population density on the results of the study of water supplies in five California counties.

P M Conforti
PMCID: PMC1569103  PMID: 6319119

Abstract

Two previous studies (1969-1971 and 1969-1974) examined the association between cancer incidence and chrysotile asbestos ingested through drinking water in the San Francisco-Oakland Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA). Population density, an important covariable in the association between cancer and environmental agents, was not included in the analyses of these studies. The present work determines the effect of this covariable on the results of the second San Francisco-Oakland SMSA study. The original and reanalyzed results are compared to reassess the association between cancer and asbestos. The only change in the regression procedures of the original studies was the addition of population density as an independent variable in the reanalysis. The results of the reanalysis showed that population density had little effect on the results of the second study. Slightly more significance was found for asbestos regression coefficients in the reanalysis, including population density, than in the original analysis. These regression coefficients for asbestos indicated a positive association between ingested chrysotile asbestos and some cancer body sites. The conclusion of the reanalysis was that population density was distributed across the San Francisco-Oakland SMSA in such a way that it had little effect on the observation of an association between ingested asbestos and cancer.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

  1. Conforti P. M., Kanarek M. S., Jackson L. A., Cooper R. C., Murchio J. C. Asbestos in drinking water and cancer in the San Francisco Bay Area: 1969-1974 incidence. J Chronic Dis. 1981;34(5):211–224. doi: 10.1016/0021-9681(81)90065-5. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
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