The findings of a number of published reports have been conflicting with regard to the role of parental occupation in the occurrence of cancer in children. In the present study, the occupations and occupational exposures of parents before and after the birth of a child who later developed leukemia or a brain tumor (cases) were compared with the occupational experience of parents of children with other cancers and of normal children. Forty-three children diagnosed with leukemia from 1969 through 1974 and 70 children diagnosed with brain tumors from 1965 through 1974 in the Baltimore Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area were ascertained.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfanits of poor (as measured by an index) mothers were 15 percent smaller than infanits of nonpoor mothers. Infants from poor families had multiple anatomic evidences of prenatal undernutrition.
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