Title: Healthy Worker Effect (HWE): William Ogle, 1885
1Healthy Worker Effect (HWE)William Ogle, 1885
- Identified two major difficulties in occupational
mortality studies - some occupations may be of necessity recruited
from men of supernormal physical condition
(selection into the workplace or cohort) - various occupations require a considerable
standard of muscular strength and vigor to be
maintained (survivor effect, or selection out of
the workplace or cohort)
2Healthy Worker Effect (HWE)William Ogle, 1885
- Ogle recognized that the bias from these two
difficulties was in the same direction bias away
from the null and towards lower than expected
mortality and morbidity rates
3Healthy Worker Effect (HWE)
- A pervasive problem in occupational mortality and
morbidity studies - Leads to underestimates of, (or may totally
obliterate), exposure-disease associations - Leads to distortion of dose-response
relationships - General principle for minimizing HWE bias
- make exposure-disease comparisons among those
similarly affected by the bias
4Sources of Healthy Worker Effect
- Healthy Hire Effect
- Initial selection of healthy individuals at time
of hire so that their disease risks differ from
the disease risks in the source (general)
population - Hiring is dependent upon passing a pre-employment
medical examination - Self-selection of individual (able to apply for
the job) - Bias occurs when comparing disease rates between
the worker cohort and the general population - Effect is greatest during the initial period of
follow-up and diminishes to some extent over time - Bias lower than expected mortality/morbidity
rates
5Sources of Healthy Worker Effect
- Time-Since-Hire Effect
- Decline in health with time (e.g., gt15 years)
since hire (the effect of the initial selection
in the hiring process wears off over time) - Bias occurs because lower cumulative exposure
categories include more recent hires than higher
cumulative exposure categories - Increasing time-since-hire is correlated with
increasing cumulative exposure - Higher cumulative exposure categories appear to
be associated with higher disease risks even when
no exposure-disease relationship exists - Bias is away from null leading to an overestimate
of the health effect at higher cumulative
exposure levels
6Sources of Healthy Worker Effect
- Healthy Survivor Effect
- a continuing selection process in the workplace
- Survival of healthier individuals in the active
workforce (a selective retention of healthy
workers in the workforce) - Selection out of unhealthy (symptomatic) workers
from workforce (health-related job mobility or
termination) - Terminate employment
- Transfer to jobs with lower exposures
7Sources of Healthy Worker Effect
- Healthy Survivor Effect
- Can be viewed as a confounder
- Terminating employment (or transfer to a less
exposed job) is related to future exposure - Terminating employment is an independent risk
factor for disease - Beneficial effects to health of continued
employment - Improved access to health care
- Higher standard of living
- Physical exercise
- Routine disease screening at workplace
- Job transfer may be related to health and
exposure status - Workers realize exposure is causing health
problems and transfer to lower/no exposure jobs
8Sources of Healthy Worker Effect
- Healthy Survivor Effect
- Can also be viewed as a selection bias
- Impact on a cross-sectional study of a cohort
- Study includes only workers remaining in the
workplace (active workers) a survivor
(healthier) population - Less healthy workers leave (i.e., are selected
out of) the workplace prior to the study and are
therefore not included in the study - Bias effects of exposure are underestimated
- Impact on longitudinal (prospective/retrospective)
cohort study - Healthier workers remain in the workplace and
therefore generally have higher cumulative
exposures than less healthy workers who leave the
workplace or transfer to less exposed jobs - Effects of increasing cumulative exposure are
underestimated - The bias is not due to a loss to follow-up, since
those who leave work are not usually lost to
follow-up.
9Sources of Healthy Worker Effect
- Healthy Survivor Effect Bias
- Leads to lower than expected disease rates
- When there is no exposure-disease relationship,
(and even after stratifying by time-since-hire),
higher cumulative exposure appears protective of
health - Workers with longer employment history will, on
average, have higher cumulative exposures than
workers with shorter employment history, and - Since workers with shorter employment history
tend to be less healthy due to the healthy
survivor effect, higher cumulative exposures can
appear to have a protective effect
10Sources of Healthy Worker Effect
- Some industries may accept workers with social
problems, unhealthy habits, or health problems - contributes to healthy survivor effect bias
- Some industries will not hire such workers
- contributes to healthy hire effect bias
- Some factors affecting hiring practices
- Unemployment rate
- Prevalence of pre-employment health exams
- Availability of other social safety net
programs - Physical requirements of the job
- If selection into subgroups of job tasks or
exposures within the cohort is based on health
status of the worker at time of hire, then
internal comparisons may be biased (internal
healthy hire effect bias)
11Sources of Healthy Worker Effect
- The effects of healthy worker effect biases may
vary by - Gender
- Race/ethnicity
- Social class
- Work status
- Age at hire
- Length of employment
- Length of follow-up
- Type of occupation
- Cause of mortality/morbidity
12Healthy Worker EffectImpact on measures of
effect
- Impact (bias) on effect measures is most striking
for - morbidity measures
- pulmonary function, respiratory symptoms
- neurobehavioral symptoms
- workplace injuries
- mortality measures
- all causes of death combined
- nonmalignant chronic conditions (e.g., heart
disease) - Impact is less striking for cancer endpoints
13Retrospective Cohort Study of polyvinyl chloride
manufacturing workers, 1940-1974Healthy Hire
Effect
Standardized Mortality Ratio (SMR) by cause of death and length of time (years) since entering the industry Standardized Mortality Ratio (SMR) by cause of death and length of time (years) since entering the industry Standardized Mortality Ratio (SMR) by cause of death and length of time (years) since entering the industry Standardized Mortality Ratio (SMR) by cause of death and length of time (years) since entering the industry Standardized Mortality Ratio (SMR) by cause of death and length of time (years) since entering the industry Standardized Mortality Ratio (SMR) by cause of death and length of time (years) since entering the industry
Cause of Death 0-4 yrs 5-9 yrs 10-14 yrs 15 yrs Total period
All causes 37.4 62.9 75.1 94.2 75.4
All cancers 44.5 70.6 94.0 118.8 90.7
Circulatory disease 21.5 70.3 84.7 90.7 76.9
Respiratory disease 20.9 38.8 31.3 93.0 62.6
14Retrospective Cohort Study of polyvinyl chloride
manufacturing workers, 1940-1974Healthy
Survivor Effect
Current and past (i.e., terminated employment lt15 yrs from time of hire) employees alive 15 years after time of hire Current and past (i.e., terminated employment lt15 yrs from time of hire) employees alive 15 years after time of hire Current and past (i.e., terminated employment lt15 yrs from time of hire) employees alive 15 years after time of hire Current and past (i.e., terminated employment lt15 yrs from time of hire) employees alive 15 years after time of hire Current and past (i.e., terminated employment lt15 yrs from time of hire) employees alive 15 years after time of hire Current and past (i.e., terminated employment lt15 yrs from time of hire) employees alive 15 years after time of hire Current and past (i.e., terminated employment lt15 yrs from time of hire) employees alive 15 years after time of hire
Cause of death Current employees Observed Expected SMR Current employees Observed Expected SMR Current employees Observed Expected SMR Past employees Observed Expected SMR Past employees Observed Expected SMR Past employees Observed Expected SMR
All cancers 24 26.99 89 44 33.81 130
Lung cancer 6 11.91 50 22 14.10 156
Circulatory disease 37 49.24 75 73 72.01 101
Respiratory disease 8 12.81 63 24 21.63 111
All deaths 75 101.36 74.0 155 142.94 108.4
15Healthy Worker Effect (HWE)Impact on measures
of effect
- Why is HWE bias greater for nonmalignant
morbidity/mortality? - Symptoms usually accompany these conditions
- Asymptomatic individuals are
- more likely to be hired
- more likely to remain actively employed
- less likely to either leave the workplace or
transfer to a job with lower exposures
16Minimizing Healthy Worker Effect Biases
- Minimizing Healthy Hire Effect Bias
- Make comparisons internal to the cohort
- e.g., compare disease rates among different
exposure categories within the cohort - Internal comparisons minimize this bias because
- All cohort members passed through similar hiring
process - Differences in the distribution of confounders
(e.g., smoking status) within the cohort are much
smaller than differences between the cohort and
the general (source) population - Avoid combining all causes of mortality
17Minimizing Healthy Worker Effect Biases
- Minimizing Time-Since-Hire Effect Bias
- Internal comparisons alone cannot solve the
problem - Stratify by time-since-hire
- Compare cumulative exposure groups (e.g., high vs
low cumulative exposure) among those with shorter
time since hire - Compare cumulative exposure groups among those
with longer time since hire - Stratify by age (currrent or at hire) and work
status (active/inactive) instead of
time-since-hire
18Minimizing Healthy Worker Effect Biases
- Minimizing Healthy Survivor Effect Bias
- The most difficult of the healthy worker effect
biases to minimize - Making internal comparisons and stratifying by
time-since-hire are not sufficient to minimize
this bias - General principle make comparisons among those
who are similarly affected by the healthy
survivor effect bias
19Possible strategies to Minimize Healthy Survivor
Effect Bias
- Restrict analysis to those who survive and are
followed up for at least 10-15 years since time
of hire - Disadvantages
- loss of statistical power due to smaller numbers
after restriction - Assumes healthy survivor effect is minimal after
10-15 years, but there is no evidence that this
is the case.
20Possible strategies to Minimize Healthy Survivor
Effect Bias
- Stratify by employment status active vs inactive
- Disadvantage
- Inactive group has heterogeneous disease risks,
since the inactive worker may be - employed elsewhere
- disabled
- retired
- voluntarily unemployed or involuntarily
unemployed - Solution
- obtain data to distinguish those who are
off-work from those who are employed elsewhere - If data are unavailable, stratify by current age
(a proxy for retired vs other inactive) - Stratify by time since transfer to deal with
workers who transferred for health reasons
21Possible strategies to Minimize Healthy Survivor
Effect Bias
- Stratify by employment status active vs inactive
- Disadvantage
- Cross-sectional studies only include active
workers, and there is no data on the health
status of inactive workers - Solution
- Transform prevalence data into incidence data
- use self-reported year of first onset of symptoms
to determine yearly incidence rates - compare incidence rates among the exposure groups
for each year prior to the cross-sectional survey - Focus on incidence rates one to two years prior
to the survey date
22Example of transforming prevalence data into
incidence data by using self-reported year of
onset to determine yearly incidence rates
persistent pain from repetitive motion among
garment workers
23Possible strategies to Minimize Healthy Survivor
Effect Bias
- Lag exposures ignores recent exposures
- Motivation Since only the healthier workers
survived on the job to receive recent exposures,
ignore the recent exposures to eliminate the
relationship between exposure and job survival. - This is the same procedure as assuming a latency
period for a disease, except that the motivation
for defining a latency period has to do with the
exposure-disease process, not the exposure-job
survival relationship
24Possible strategies to Minimize Healthy Survivor
Effect Bias
- Lag exposures
- Disadvantages
- Assumes that the period in which the healthy
survivor bias operates is shorter than the
exposure lag time (or latency period) - Assumes time off work is equivalent to time on
work at zero exposure - Empirical results indicate that this approach
works as well or better than stratifying on
employment status in dealing with bias due to
termination of employment for health reasons