References
- Pukkala E, Martinsen JI, Lynge E, Gunnarsdottir HK, Sparen P, Tryggvadottir L, et al. Occupation and cancer – follow-up of 15 million people in five Nordic countries. Acta Oncol 2009; 48: 64–790
- Kauppinen T, Heikkila P, Plato N, Woldbaek T, Lenvik K, Hansen J, et al. Construction of job-exposure matrices for the Nordic Occuptional Cancer Study (NOCCA). Acta Oncol 2009; 48: 791–800
- Andersen A, Barlow L, Engeland A, Kjaerheim K, Lynge E, Pukkala E. Work-related cancer in the Nordic countries. Scand J Work Environ Health 1999; 25(Suppl 2)1–116
- Office of Population Censuses and Surveys The Registrar General's Decenenial Supplement, England and Wales, 1951, Occupational Mortality, London. LondonUK: HMSO; 1957.
- Guralnick L. Mortality by occupation and cause of death. Washington, DC: Department of Health Education and Welfare: 1963. ( DHEW (vital statistics special rep. no. 53(3).
- Hrubec Z, Blair AE, Rogot E, Vaught V. Mortality risks by occupation among U.S. veterans of known smoking status, 1954–1980. NIH Publication No. 92-3407, Bethesda, , MD.
- Howe GR, Lindsay JP. A follow-up study of a ten-percent sample of the Canadian labor force: I. Cancer mortality in males, 1965–1973. J Natl Cancer Inst 1983; 70: 37–44
- McMichael AJ, Hartshorne JM. Mortality risks in Australian men by occupational groups, 1968–1978. Med J Austr 1982; 1: 253–6