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American Journal of Public Health, Vol. 80, Issue 2 207-208, Copyright © 1990 by American Public Health Association

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Retirement and primary cardiac arrest in males.

D S Siscovick, D S Strogatz, N S Weiss and G Rennert

Division of General Internal Medicine, Harborview Medical Center, Seattle, WA 98104.

We investigated the association between retirement and primary cardiac arrest (PCA) in 126 male cases and controls, 25-75 years of age, without prior heart disease or comorbidity. After adjustment for age alone, retirement was not associated with an increased risk of PCA, (OR = 1.1; 95% confidence intervals = 0.5, 2.4). This lack of association was not uniform across age strata, however. In 10 of 19 discordant pairs 60 or more years of age, the control subject had been retired; in all seven discordant pairs under 60, the case had been retired (lower 95% CI of the relative risk = 1.9).







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