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 1 Obesity, white blood cell counts, and platelet counts among police officers
Authors Charles-LE; Fekedulegn-D; McCall-T; Burchfiel-CM; Andrew-ME; Violanti-JM 
Source Obesity 2007 Nov; 15(11):2846-2854 
Link http://www.obesityresearch.org/cgi/content/abstract/15/11/2846 
NIOSHTIC No. 20033184 
AbstractObjective: To determine the association between several obesity indices (BMI, waist circumference, waist-to-hip and waist-to-height ratios, and abdominal height) and hematologic parameters [white blood cell (WBC) and platelet counts] among police officers. Research Methods and Procedures: The authors conducted this cross-sectional study among 104 randomly selected officers (41 women and 63 men) from the Buffalo, NY, Police Department. Anthropometric measures were performed by clinic staff, and fasting blood samples were drawn for complete blood counts. Pearson's correlation, Student's t tests, ANOVA, analysis of covariance, and linear regression were used to assess the associations. Results: Officers ranged in age from 26 to 61 years old and were predominantly white. Among women, current smokers had significantly higher WBC counts (7.4 X 10(3) cells/mu L +/- 1.4) than former (5.2 X 10(3) cells/mu L +/- 1.4) or never smokers (5.6 x 10(3) cells/mu L +/- 1.5) (p = 0.002). Women had similar WBC counts but higher mean platelet counts than men (p = 0.005). Among women, abdominal height was positively associated with platelet count after adjustment for depression (p for trend = 0.039). Among women and men, a non-significant step-wise trend was observed between abdominal height and mean WBC counts before and after adjustment for smoking, race, and physical activity. No association was observed between obesity and platelet count among men. Discussion: Abdominal height was significantly associated with increased platelet counts among female officers. No significant associations were observed between obesity and WBC or platelet counts among male officers. 
KeywordsWeight-factors; Weight-measurement; Police-officers; Blood-tests; Sex-factors; Sampling; Sampling-methods; Statistical-analysis; Mathematical-models; Analytical-methods; Anatomy; Age-factors; Smoking; Cell-function; Cellular-function; Women; Platelets 
ContactLuenda E. Charles, CDC, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, HELD/BEB, MS L-4050, 1095 Willowdale Road, Morgantown, WV 26505-2888 
CODENOBREFR 
Publication Date20071101 
Document TypeJournal Article 
Email Addresslcharles@cdc.gov 
Fiscal Year2008 
NTIS Accession No. 
NTIS Price 
Issue of Publication11 
ISSN1930-7381 
NIOSH DivisionHELD 
Source NameObesity 
StateWV 
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