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Known since 1885 but studied systematically only in the past four decades, the healthy worker effect (HWE) is a special form of selection bias common to occupational cohort studies. The phenomenon has been under debate for many years with respect to its impact, conceptual approach (confounding, selection bias, or both), and ways to resolve or account for its effect. The effect is not uniform across age groups, gender, race, and types of occupations and nor is it constant over time. Hence, assessing HWE and accounting for it in statistical analyses is complicated and requires sophisticated methods. Here, we review the HWE, factors affecting it, and methods developed so far to deal with it.
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Ritam Chowdhury
University of Ottawa
Divyang Shah
Larsen & Toubro (India)
Abhishek R. Payal
Boston University
Indian Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Harvard University
Emory University
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary
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Chowdhury et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dad12a0d8d6ef495a3c421 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.4103/ijoem.ijoem_53_16