We have tried to find all cases of motor neuron disease (MND) with onset during the study period 1961–1990 in the county of Skaraborg, Sweden, and in this retrospective study we have identified 168 cases, 107 men and 61 women. Fifty percent of them were alive 2 years after onset. The number of MND cases in consecutive 5-year intervals during the study period was shown to be statistically significantly elevated for males in the period 1981–1985 (Knox test disjoint procedure, p = 0.02). During the period 1973–1984, 70 males had onset of MND, corresponding to an average annual incidence of 4 per 100,000 person-years. This epidemic-like cluster was compared to the MND morbidity in a neighbouring county and was shown to be statistically significantly elevated even when the p value was adjusted for multiple comparisons. Agricultural work was significantly more common among the cases compared to the rest of the population.
Mortality from MND in Spain displayed a magnitude and recently rising temporal trend similar to that described in several other countries. Specific traits were: a decrease during the 1960s, which has been described for Japan only, as well as spatial heterogeneity and a predominant recent increase among the 60-69 age group. The determinants of these unusual MND mortality patterns are unknown.
ResumenIntroducción: Se realiza un análisis bibliométrico de la revista Medicina y Seguridad del Trabajo para conocer los principales indicadores de producción científica en cuanto a visibilidad, tipología documental, autoría, referencias bibliográficas y citas.
Materiales y métodos:Estudio bibliométrico transversal y temporal con análisis de tendencias durante el periodo comprendido entre 2007 y 2012. Los datos se obtienen de SciELO y de la propia revista. El tratamiento de datos se realiza mediante un estudio de frecuencias y porcentajes para los datos cualitativos y utilizando medias y desviaciones estándar en el caso de los cuantitativos.Resultados: El número de artículos originales y de revisión se mantienen con datos similares a los del quinquenio anterior. El índice de cooperación, 3 autores por artículo, es similar al descrito en otros trabajos. El número de referencias bibliográficas por artículo aumenta a partir de 2009 y se mantiene estable posteriormente. El porcentaje de artículos procedentes de Latinoamérica supone el 34% de los publicados.Discusión: Se observa un incremento del número de artículos originales del 50% aunque es inferior al descrito en otros estudios. El número de referencias bibliográficas medias por artículo es inferior al máximo recomendado en las normas de publicación de la revista. Durante los últimos años se detecta un fuerte impulso de la revista en lo que se refiere tanto a indicadores cuantitativos como a cualitativos. Segur Trab (Internet) 2013; 59 (233)
Med
AbstractIntroduction: A bibliometric analysis of Medicina y Seguridad del Trabajo journal was carried out with the aim of getting to know the principal indicators of the scientific output as regards visibility, documentary typology, authorship, bibliographic references and citations.
Mortality rates from motor neuron disease (MND) in Spain were analysed for the years 1960–1989, a period in which 3,530 deaths were recorded from the disease and during which the crude annual mortality rate ranged between 0.35 and 0.95 deaths per 100,000 persons. Whilst the crude mortality rate fell by 54% during the decade 1960–1969, there was a net increase of 26% over the entire period. The influence of three sets of variables – the increasing mean age of the population, changing environmental factors, and changing competition between diseases – upon mortality rates were investigated through Gompertzian analysis of crude and age-adjusted mortality rates. The increased mean age of the population contributed significantly to the overall rise in mortality from MND over the whole period, a feature that has previously been demonstrated to occur in the majority of industrialised countries. The unusual pattern of a decline and subsequent rise in mortality appears to be due to the influence of changing environmental factors on a sub-population susceptible to the disease.
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