1966
DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(66)93034-0
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Incidence and Prediction of Ischæmic Heart-Disease in London Busmen

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Cited by 366 publications
(84 citation statements)
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“…The crosssectional study demonstrated a higher prevalence of questionnaire-positive angina pectoris among bus drivers than among locomotive engineers (27). Studies from London and Norway have reported similar results (16,26). The bus drivers in the Danish studies demonstrated a marked maladaptation to work, experienced poor work environment, and evinced pronounced mental symptoms.…”
supporting
confidence: 55%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The crosssectional study demonstrated a higher prevalence of questionnaire-positive angina pectoris among bus drivers than among locomotive engineers (27). Studies from London and Norway have reported similar results (16,26). The bus drivers in the Danish studies demonstrated a marked maladaptation to work, experienced poor work environment, and evinced pronounced mental symptoms.…”
supporting
confidence: 55%
“…Serum cholesterol was found to be higher in bus drivers than in other men, and it normalized after retirement from work (28). Similar results were found in England and Norway (13,26). As some of the mechanisms leading to the elevated relative risk among urban bus drivers could have been affected by serum cholesterol and blood pressure due to stress (8, II), a confounder control with regard to these risk factors would lead to overmatching and reduce the effect of the objective work load (38).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 52%
“…Morris and coworkers published a landmark study in which they reported differences in CHD rates experienced by London bus drivers, who had high CHD rates, and ticket takers, who had low CHD rates (22). The drivers sat all day whereas the ticket takers climbed up and down the double-decker buses collecting fares, suggesting an association between physical activity and CHD rates.…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…An investigation of London busmen soon after also concluded that systolic pressure was a better predictor of hypertensive events following coronary disease. 10 In 1969 the Framingham Study disputed the accepted notion that the adverse consequences of hypertension derive chiefly from the diastolic pressure for coronary disease and a year later for stroke. 11,12 Several years later these findings of an equal or greater influence of systolic pressure were extended to peripheral artery disease and heart failure.…”
Section: Components Of Blood Pressurementioning
confidence: 99%