Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
http://www.acoem.org/JOEM.aspx
Police Work and Subclinical Atherosclerosis
P. Nedra Joseph, PhD
Maurizio Trevisan, MD
John M. Violanti, PhD
Richard Donahue, PhD
Michael E. Andrew, PhD
Cecil M. Burchfiel, PhD
Joan Dorn, PhD
Objective: Employment as an urban police officer was hypothesized to be associated with increased
structural subclinical cardiovascular disease (CVD), measured by carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT).
Methods: The sample of men and women consisted of police officers ( n
312) and the general population
(n 318), free of clinical
CVD. Results: Officers had elevated levels of age-adjusted
CVD risk factors
(blood pressure, total cholesterol, smoking prevalence) compared with the population
sample. In age-, gender-, and traditional risk factor-adjusted models, police
officers exhibited increased mean common carotid IMT (police 0.67 mm, population 0.64 mm; P 0.03)
and mean maximum carotid IMT (police 0.99 mm, population
0.95 mm; P 0.13).
Conclusions: Police officers have increased levels of atherosclerosis compared with a general population sample, which was not fully explained by
elevated CVD risk factors; thereby potentially implicating other mechanisms
whereby law enforcement work may increase CVD
risk. ( J Occup
Environ Med. 2009;51:700 –707)
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