Environmental Health

official impact factor 2.45

Open Access Research

Mortality and life expectancy of professional fire fighters in Hamburg, Germany: a cohort study 1950 – 2000

Norbert L Wagner1*, Jürgen Berger2, Dieter Flesch-Janys2, Peter Koch2, Anja Köchel2, Michel Peschke3 and Trude Ossenbach3

Author Affiliations

1 Department of Environmental Health Engineering, Sri Ramachandra Medical College & Research Institute 1, Ramachandra Nagar, Porur, Chennai 600 116, India

2 Epidemiology Working Group, Department of Science and Health and Institute for Medical Biometrics and Epidemiology, Winterhuder Weg 29, 22085 Hamburg, Germany

3 Occupational Medical Service – Personnel Department, Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg Alter Steinweg 4, 20459 Hamburg, Germany

For all author emails, please log on.

Environmental Health: A Global Access Science Source 2006, 5:27 doi:10.1186/1476-069X-5-27

Published: 4 October 2006

Abstract

Background

The healthy worker effect may hide adverse health effects in hazardous jobs, especially those where physical fitness is required. Fire fighters may serve as a good example because they sometimes are severely exposed to hazardous substances while on the other hand their physical fitness and their strong health surveillance by far exceeds that of comparable persons from the general population.

Methods

To study this effect a historic cohort study was conducted to assess mortality and life expectancy of professional fire fighters of the City of Hamburg, Germany. Fire departments and trade unions questioned the validity of existing studies from outside Germany because of specific differences in the professional career. No mortality study had been conducted so far in Germany and only few in Europe. Information on all active and retired fire fighters was extracted from personnel records. To assure completeness of data the cohort was restricted to all fire fighters being active on January 1, 1950 or later. Follow up of the cohort ended on June 30th 2000. Vital status was assessed by personnel records, pension fund records and the German residence registries. Mortality of fire fighters was compared to mortality of the Hamburg and German male population by means of standardized mortality ratios. Life expectancy was calculated using life table analysis. Multivariate proportional hazard models were used to assess the effect of seniority, time from first employment, and other occupational characteristics on mortality.

Results

The cohort consists of 4640 fire fighters accumulating 111796 person years. Vital status could be determined for 98.2% of the cohort. By the end of follow up 1052 person were deceased. Standardized Mortality Ratio (SMR) for the total cohort was 0.79 (95% CI, 0.74–0.84) compared to Hamburg reference data and 0.78 (95% CI, 0.74–0.83) compared to National German reference data. Conditional life expectancy of a 30 year old fire fighter was 45.3 years as compared to 42.9 year of a German male in normal population. Job tasks, rank status and early retirement negatively influenced mortality. For fire fighters with comparably short duration of employment the mortality advantage diminished with longer time since first employment. SMR of persons who retired early was 1.25 (95% CI, 1.13–1.60) in reference to the general German population and the SMR of 1.71 (1.18–2.50) in the multivariate regression model.

Conclusion

A strong healthy worker effect was observed for the cohort, which diminished with longer time since first employment for fire fighters with shorter duration of employment, as expected. The negative effects on mortality of job tasks, rank status and in particular early retirement indicate the presence of undetermined and specific risks related to occupational hazards of fire fighters.