Respiratory illness and infection was studied in the community of Tecumseh, Michigan, USA, during a six-year period. Acute illness was ascertained by making weekly telephone calls, and prevalent agents were identified by microbial isolation. Infection rates were determined serologically using blood specimens collected routinely at six monthly intervals from those reported to be ill. Illness rates were higher in the youngest children of families up to the age of three years than for the oldest children of the same ages. Above the age of three, the pattern was reversed. Among the adults, rates of illness were shown to relate not only to the presence, but also to the age of children in the home. Throughout this comparison, women were more likely to be ill than men in the same groups. Smoking in itself was not related to increased acute respiratory illnesses, but persons with symptoms of chronic bronchitis were found to have higher illness rates independently of whether they smoked.
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Monto et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1c644ace55a21a522fb67e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/jech.31.2.101
Arnold S. Monto
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Helen E. Ross
Toronto Public Health
Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health
University of Michigan
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