Volume 13, Number 12—December 2007
Research
Swine Workers and Swine Influenza Virus Infections
Table 1
Variables | AHS swine-exposed, no. (%), n = 707 | AHS nonswine-exposed, no. (%), n = 80 | University controls, no. (%), n = 79 |
---|---|---|---|
Sex† | |||
Male | 455 (64.4) | 3 (3.8) | 26 (32.9) |
Female | 252 (35.6) | 77 (96.3) | 53 (67.1) |
Age group, y | |||
24–45 | 71 (10.0) | 19 (23.8) | 56 (70.9) |
46–54 | 179 (25.3) | 22 (27.5) | 13 (16.5) |
55–89 | 457 (64.6) | 39 (48.8) | 10 (12.7) |
Mean age‡ |
56 |
51.1 |
35.3 |
Received influenza vaccine in the past 4 y | |||
Yes | 392 (55.5) | 43 (53.8) | 44 (55.7) |
No/unsure | 315 (44.6) | 37 (46.3) | 35 (44.3) |
Swine influenza vaccine in 1976* | |||
Yes | 62 (8.8) | 4 (5.0) | 1 (1.3) |
No | 506 (71.6) | 53 (66.3) | 78 (98.7) |
Unsure | 132 (18.7) | 22 (27.5) | 0 |
Missing |
7 (1.0) |
1 (1.3) |
0 |
Currently work with nursery or finishing swine | |||
Nursery swine | 18 (2.6) | 0 | – |
Finishing swine | 126 (17.8) | 0 | – |
Both | 168 (23.8) | 0 | – |
No | 391 (55.3) | 80 (100.0) | – |
Missing |
4 (0.6) |
0 |
|
Years worked in swine production | |||
Never | 0 | 76 (95.0) | – |
<1 | 1 (0.1) | 0 | – |
1–4 | 10 (1.4) | 0 | – |
5–10 | 38 (5.4) | 0 | – |
>10 | 650 (91.9) | 0 | – |
Missing |
8 (1.1) |
4 (5.0) |
|
On average, how often do you see or touch swine, other than the swine on the farm where you work? | |||
Never | 270 (38.2) | 49 (61.3) | – |
Rarely | 344 (48.7) | 24 (30.0) | – |
Monthly | 27 (3.8) | 0 | – |
Weekly | 27 (3.8) | 0 | – |
Every day | 14 (2.0) | 1 (1.3) | – |
Missing |
25 (3.5) |
6 (7.5) |
– |
How long have you lived on this or other swine farm? | |||
Never | 15 (2.1) | 18 (22.5) | – |
<1 y | 1 (0.1) | 1 (1.3) | – |
1–4 ys | 4 (0.6) | 2 (2.5) | – |
5–10 y | 18 (2.6) | 8 (10.0) | – |
>10 y | 636 (90.0) | 42 (52.5) | – |
Missing |
33 (4.7) |
9 (11.3) |
– |
Work in a slaughterhouse or meat processing plant | |||
Yes | 4 (0.6) | 2 (2.5) | – |
No | 674 (95.3) | 75 (93.8) | – |
Missing | 29 (4.1) | 3 (3.8) | – |
*AHS, Agricultural Health Study; AHS swine-exposed, participants from the A HS who reported working in swine production; AHS nonswine-exposed, participants from the AHS who denied ever working in swine production (96.3% female and among these females 75.5% were spouses of the AHS swine–exposed); university controls, faculty, staff, and students from the University of Iowa who denied ever working in swine production.
†Statistically significant considering a 95% confidence level by Fisher exact test for the 3 groups.
‡Statistically significant considering a 95% confidence level by analysis of variance test for the 3 groups.
Page created: July 06, 2010
Page updated: July 06, 2010
Page reviewed: July 06, 2010
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.