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Dive into the research topics where Peter Egger is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Egger.


Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 1995

Manual handling activities and risk of low back pain in nurses.

Julia Smedley; Peter Egger; C Cooper; David Coggon

OBJECTIVE--To investigate the risk factors for low back pain in hospital nurses, with particular emphasis on the role of specific nursing activities. METHODS--A cross sectional survey of 2405 nurses employed by a group of teaching hospitals was carried out. Self administered questionnaires were used to collect information about occupational activities, non-occupational risk factors for back symptoms, and history of low back pain. RESULTS--The overall response rate was 69%. Among 1616 women, the lifetime prevalence of back pain was 60% and the one year period prevalence 45%. 10% had been absent from work because of back pain for a cumulative period exceeding four weeks. Rates in men were generally similar to those in women. In women back pain during the previous 12 months was weakly associated with height, and was significantly more common in those who reported frequent non-musculoskeletal symptoms such as headache and low mood. After adjustment for height and non-musculoskeletal symptoms, significant associations were found with frequency of manually moving patients around on the bed, manually transferring patients between bed and chair, and manually lifting patients from the floor. In contrast, no clear increase in risk was found in relation to transfer of patients with canvas and poles, manually lifting patients in and out of the bath, or lifting patients with mechanical aids. Confirmation of these findings is now being sought in a prospective study of the same population. CONCLUSIONS--This study confirms that low back pain is highly prevalent among nurses and is associated with a high level of sickness absence. People who often report non-musculoskeletal symptoms were significantly more likely to report low back pain. Specific manual handling tasks were associated with an increased risk of back pain; however, no such association was found with mechanised patient transfers.


BMJ | 1997

Prospective cohort study of predictors of incident low back pain in nurses

Julia Smedley; Peter Egger; C Cooper; David Coggon

Abstract Objective: To assess the impact of handling patients and indicators of individual susceptibility on risk of low back pain in nurses. Design: Prospective cohort study with follow up by repeated self administered questionnaires every three months over two years. Setting: NHS university hospitals trust. Subjects: 961 female nurses who had been free from low back pain for at least one month at the time of completing a baseline questionnaire. Main outcome measures: Incidence of new low back pain during follow up and of pain leading to absence from work. Results: Of 838 women who provided data suitable for analysis, 322 (38%) developed low back pain during follow up (mean 18.6 months), including 93 (11%) whose pain led to absence from work. The strongest predictor of new low back pain was earlier history of the symptom, and risk was particularly high if previous pain had lasted for over a month in total and had occurred within the 12 months before entry to the study (incidence during follow up 66%). Frequent low mood at baseline was strongly associated with subsequent absence from work for back pain (odds ratio 3.4; 95% confidence interval 1.4 to 8.2). After adjustment for earlier history of back pain and other potential confounders, risk was higher in nurses who reported frequent manual transfer of patients between bed and chair, manual repositioning of patients on the bed, and lifting patients in or out of the bath with a hoist. Conclusions: Of the indicators of individual susceptibility that were examined, only history of back trouble was sufficiently predictive to justify selective exclusion of some applicants for nursing posts. The main route to prevention of back disorders among nurses is likely to lie in improved ergonomics. Key messages A history of back trouble, particularly if recent and prolonged, is highly predictive of new episodes of back pain There are grounds for excluding nurses with recent and prolonged back pain from the most physically demanding jobs Age, height, and weight are not sufficiently discriminatory for risk of back pain to influence selection and appointment of nurses Back pain is more common in nurses who lift and move patients frequently without the use of mechanical aids Controlled trials are needed to assess the benefits of ergonomic intervention aimed at prevention of back pain in nurses


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 1994

Occupational activity and osteoarthritis of the knee.

C Cooper; Timothy E. McAlindon; David Coggon; Peter Egger; Paul Dieppe

OBJECTIVES--To test the hypothesis that specific occupational physical activities are risk factors for knee osteoarthritis (OA). METHODS--A population-based case-control study of knee osteoarthritis was carried out in which 109 men and women with painful, radiographically confirmed knee OA were compared with 218 age and sex matched controls who had not suffered knee pain and had normal radiographs. Information collected included a lifetime occupational history and details of specific workplace physical activities. RESULTS--After adjustment for obesity and Heberdens nodes, the risk of knee OA was significantly elevated in subjects whose main job entailed more than 30 minutes per day squatting (OR 6.9, 95% CI 1.8-26.4) or kneeling (OR 3.4, 95% CI 1.3-9.1), or climbing more than ten flights of stairs per day (OR 2.7, 95% CI 1.2-6.1). The increase in risk associated with kneeling or squatting appeared to be more marked in subjects whose jobs entailed heavy lifting, but the size of the study did not permit precise delineation of any such interaction. CONCLUSIONS--These data suggest that prolonged or repeated knee bending is a risk factor for knee OA, and that risk may be higher in jobs which entail both knee bending and mechanical loading.


British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 1996

Childhood growth and age at menarche

C Cooper; Diana Kuh; Peter Egger; Michael Wadsworth; D. J. P. Barker

Objective To study the influence of birthweight, and weight and height at age seven years, on menarcheal age in a national sample of 1471 girls in England, Scotland and Wales.


Early Human Development | 1997

Is the age of menopause determined in-utero?

Janet Cresswell; Peter Egger; C.H.D. Fall; Clive Osmond; RobertB. Fraser; D. J. P. Barker

OBJECTIVE To determine whether age at menopause is related to size at birth. DESIGN A follow-up study of two groups of women whose size at birth was recorded. SETTING Hertfordshire and Sheffield, England. POPULATION 755 women aged 60-71 years born in Hertfordshire; 235 women aged 40-42 years born in the Jessop Hospital, Sheffield. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Age at natural menopause or serum follicle stimulating hormone concentration greater than 25 IU/ml. RESULTS Age at menopause was unrelated to birth weight. However, it occurred at a younger age in women who had low weight at 1 year. This was independent of their body weight and smoking habits. In the population of younger women those who had had an early menopause tended to have been short at birth, with a high ponderal index (birth weight/length3). CONCLUSION Growth retardation in late gestation, leading to shortness at birth and low weight gain in infancy, may be associated with a reduced number of primordial follicles in the ovary leading in turn to an earlier menopause.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 1994

Defining osteoarthritis of the hand for epidemiological studies: the Chingford Study.

Deborah J. Hart; Tim D. Spector; Peter Egger; David Coggon; C Cooper

OBJECTIVES--To explore the relative merits of clinical and radiological examination in defining hand osteoarthritis (OA) for epidemiological purposes. METHODS--A total of 976 women aged 45-64 years were selected from the general population and underwent a structured interview, clinical examination of the hand joints and radiography of the hands and knees. The inter-relationship of the clinical and radiological findings was examined, and also the association of each with hand symptoms and the presence of knee OA. RESULTS--Clinical and radiographic signs of hand OA generally correlated with each other, and each was associated with hand symptoms to a similar degree. When analysed in combination, they were only marginally better at predicting symptoms than when tested individually. However, when they were examined in relation to radiographic features of knee OA, there was a significantly stronger association with radiographic features of hand OA than with clinical features. CONCLUSIONS--Hand radiology provides a better overall assessment of osteoarthritis than physical examination of the interphalangeal joints or carpo-metacarpal joint; in situations where radiology is not available clinical examination is a viable substitute.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 1997

Early infection and subsequent insulin dependent diabetes

Caspar Gibbon; Trevor A. Smith; Peter Egger; Peter Betts; David Phillips

In a study of 58 children under the age of 16 with insulin dependent diabetes (IDDM) and 172 matched non-diabetic controls, infection during the first year of life was associated with a reduction in diabetes risk (odds ratio 0.81, 95% confidence interval 0.67 to 0.98, per infective episode). Decreased exposure to common infections during infancy may be linked with subsequent IDDM.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 1995

Osteoarthritis of the hip joint and acetabular dysplasia in women.

R. W. Smith; Peter Egger; David Coggon; M. I. D. Cawley; C Cooper

OBJECTIVE--To investigate the suggestion that osteoarthritis (OA) of the hip joint is often caused by subclinical acetabular dysplasia among elderly British women. METHODS--We examined 393 hip joints from the radiographs of a sample of women aged 60-75 years undergoing intravenous urography. Acetabular dysplasia was assessed using measurements of the centre-edge (CE) angle and acetabular depth (AD), which are both reduced in this condition. OA was assessed using an overall grade based on the Kellgren and Lawrence system and by measurement of minimum joint space (MJS). RESULTS--MJS was the more repeatable measure of OA, and showed a strong correlation with overall grade (Spearman rank correlation coefficient rs = -0.61, p < 0.01). MJS was significantly negatively correlated with CE angle (Pearson correlation coefficient r = -0.25, p < 0.001) and AD (r = -0.11, p < 0.05). Consistent with these findings, there was a weak but significant positive correlation between overall grade of OA and one of the two measures (CE angle) of acetabular dysplasia. CONCLUSIONS--These results do not support the hypothesis that mild degrees of acetabular dysplasia account for a substantial proportion of hip OA in elderly women. Changes in hip joint geometry as a result of OA may be responsible for the weak negative association observed.


American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 1997

Validity of a questionnaire for assessing occupational activities.

Lesley Campbell; Brian Pannett; Peter Egger; C Cooper; David Coggon

The objective of this article is to assess the validity of data on occupational activities obtained by a questionnaire. 152 employees from 16 jobs were interviewed independently about activities in their work, using a structured questionnaire. For 11 of the jobs, two further workers were observed during a typical shift, and their activities recorded. The agreement of reporting between subjects doing the same job and with observation was assessed. There was good agreement between subjects and with observation for most of the activities examined when the activities were classified dichotomously. However, frequency of heavy lifting was reported inconsistently. Questionnaires are able to distinguish major differences in physical activity that occur between jobs in the general population, but do not allow more detailed quantification of activities.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 1996

Lateral bone density measurements in osteoarthritis of the lumbar spine.

D. J. Peacock; Peter Egger; P. Taylor; M. I. D. Cawley; C Cooper

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether spinal osteoarthritis (OA) is responsible for the common finding that lumbar spine bone mineral density (BMD) is greater when measured in the anteroposterior plane than when measured in the lateral plane. METHODS: We studied lateral spine radiographs from 63 women who attended a hospital outpatient department for bone density measurement and who also underwent lumbar spine radiography. Osteoarthritis was assessed using both the Kellgren and Lawrence scale and a scoring system for osteophytosis. Bone density was measured in the anteroposterior and lateral planes using a Hologic QDR-2000 instrument. RESULTS: The mean anteroposterior BMD (0.92 g/cm2) was significantly greater than the lateral BMD (0.59 g/cm2) (p < 0.01), and the difference between antero-posterior and lateral measurements was significantly associated with both increasing Kellgren and Lawrence score and osteophyte score, even after adjustment for age. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that spinal OA is a major cause of the difference between anteroposterior and lateral BMD and that lateral BMD may provide a more accurate representation of true vertebral body bone density in patients with OA of the lumbar spine.

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C Cooper

Southampton General Hospital

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D. J. P. Barker

University of Southampton

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David Coggon

University of Southampton

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C.H.D. Fall

Southampton General Hospital

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Janet Cresswell

Northern General Hospital

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Ashok K. Bhalla

Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases

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Clive Osmond

University of Southampton

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