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Edited on Sat Feb-07-09 11:54 AM by HamdenRice
For one thing, in Europe, there is a less hierarchical property market -- which is to say that their legal system does not segregate people and property by class and market price as rigidly as we do here. Utilities, therefore, tend to be situated more according to the public good than purely by value of property. Moreover, the study adjusted for socio-economic factors.
But don't take my word for it. The study says:
<quote>
We used age as the underlying timescale in our models. All models were adjusted for sex; educational level (compulsory education, secondary level, and tertiary level); highest reported occupational attainment by code (4 levels extracted from the International Standard Classification of Occupations of 1988—1) legislators, senior officials, managers, and professionals, 2) technicians and associate professionals, clerks, service workers, and shop and market sales workers, 3) skilled agricultural and fishery workers, craft and related trades workers, plant, machine operators, and assemblers, and elementary occupations, and 4) no occupation reported); civil status (single, married, divorced, widowed); urbanization category (city, agglomeration, rural municipality); and language region (German, French, Italian). We also included the number of apartments per building into the model, a potential risk factor for magnetic field exposure due to indoor wiring (8).
Finally, because Alzheimer's disease might be associated with benzene exposure, we adjusted models for living within 50 m of a major road. We extracted proximity of the buildings to the "major road network" using data from the Swiss TeleAtlas database for this purpose. The major roads network includes motorways and motorway exits, as well as "major roads of high importance": nearly 8,700 km with 7% of the population exposed to major roads in the 50-m corridor. In sensitivity analyses, we repeated analyses for persons aged less than 85 years, by sex, and examined whether results differed between deaths where Alzheimer's disease or senile dementia had been coded as the primary or concomitant cause of death.
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The poster/heckler in question simply doesn't believe in statistics and probability and so screams, "bad science" any time epidemiological studies are posted without actually reading (and certainly without understanding) the methodology.
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