Philip Morris
Society for Epidemiologic Research 23rd Annual Meeting
Fields
- Type
- PAMP, PAMPHLET
- ABST, ABSTRACT
- AGEN, AGENDA
- DRAW, DRAWING
- LIST, LIST
- Area
- SCIENTIFIC AFFAIRS/BLACK LATERAL OLD S&T
- Site
- R529
- Named Person
- Alavanja, M.
- Anda, R.F.
- Ballard, J.E.
- Barrett, R.
- Barrettconnor, E.L.
- Bayles, M.
- Benfante, R.
- Blackburn, H.
- Boice, J.
- Brownson, R.
- Buring, J.
- Bush, T.
- Byers, T.
- Cauley, J.
- Christen, W.
- Cohn, B.A.
- Cottington, E.
- Daling, J.R.
- Davis, F.
- Destefano, F.
- Dosemeci, M.
- Eaton, D.L.
- Edelstein, S.L.
- Fenster, L.
- Flegal, K.M.
- Folsom, A.R.
- Ford, E.S.
- Frank, J.
- Giovino, G.
- Haenszel, W.
- Hakim, R.B.
- Hale, W.E.
- Haley, N.
- Hammond, S.
- Heckbert, S.R.
- Hennekens, C.
- Howe, H.
- Huntley, J.
- Jacobs, D.R., J.R.
- Kaye, W.E.
- Keels, M.A.
- Kerber, R.
- Kleinman, J.
- Koepoell, T.
- Kramer, R.A.
- Lacroix, A.
- Liao, M.
- Luepker, R.V.
- Madans, J.
- Maggi, S.
- Manson, J.
- Marbury, M.C.
- Marrett, L.D.
- Miller, S.
- Motulsky, A.
- Ness, R.B.
- Ostfeld, A.
- Persky, V.
- Potter, J.D.
- Reed, D.
- Reynolds, D.L.
- Rohay, J.
- Rookus, M.A.
- Samet, J.M.
- Savitz, D.A.
- Schnatter, R.A.
- Scholes, D.
- Schwingl, P.J.
- Seddon, J.
- Sellers, T.A.
- Sprafka, J.M.
- Stamm, J.W.
- Stergachis, A.S.
- Street, D.
- Strickland, D.
- Sukavachana, O.
- Taylor, J.
- Tielsch, J.T.
- Wacholder, S.
- Wallace, R.
- Warhaftig, N.
- Weiss, N.S.
- White, L.
- Wienpahl, J.
- Williamson, D.F.
- Wingard, D.L.
- Named Organization
- Ahf, American Health Foundation
- American Cancer Society
- Brigham + Womens Hospital
- Carcinogenesis
- Centers for Disease Control
- Dana Center for Preventive Ophthalmology
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound
- Harvard Medical School
- Honolulu Heart Program
- Johns Hopkins Univ Baltimore
- Kaiser
- Lipid Research Clinic
- Mn Dept of Health
- Natl Center for Health Statistics
- Natl Inst on Aging
- NCI, Natl Cancer Inst
- Niehs, National Institute of Environmental Health Services/Sciences
- NIH, Natl Inst of Health
- Niosh, Natl Inst for Occupational Safety & Health
- Society Epidemiologic Rsrch 23rd Ann Mee
- Society for Epidemiologic Research
- Univ of Ca San Diego
- Univ of Il Chicago
- Univ of Mn Minneapolis
- Univ of NC Chapel Hill
- Univ of Pittsburgh
- Univ of Toronto
- Univ of Wa Seattle
- Usc, Univ. Of Southern Ca
- Usda, U.S. Dept of Agriculture
- Wa State Dept of Health
- Adl, A.D.Little
- Request
- Stmn/R1-048
- Document File
- 2023505851/2023506460/000600
- 2023505856/2023506195/000600
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Author (Organization)
- Society for Epidemiologic Research
- Master ID
- 2023505959/6118
- Characteristic
- ILLE, ILLEGIBLE
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- jor78e00
Document Images
GENERAL INFORMATION
The University of Utah and the Snowbird Ski and Summer Resort
welcome you to Utah. Relax in the natural beauty of unspoiled
mountains and alpine meadows. Snowbird has over a dozen~excellent
restaurants, and private clubs (for which you may buy a temporary
membership at a nominal fee). Snowbird offers special cuisines,
light luncheon places, romantic fireside lounges and clubs with
live entertainment into the night.
* A map of the Cliff Lodge, levels B & C, is included in your
packet to help in finding your meeting rooms.
* The dress is casual at all meetings.
* The phone number in the Conference Office in Red Pine is #5395
and at the registration table, # 5277.
* Refreshment break areas have been designated~ on your maps and
numbered 1 through 5.
TOUR INFORMATION-All tours are open for participants who would
like to register on-site. Cancellations, other
than for medical reasons, will not be refunded.
TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1990'
Sample.Salt Lake Tour
3:00-7:00 p.m.
A two-hour tour of Salt Lake City will provide participants with
a feeling for the unique historical beginnings of the valley. It
will be a ride back in time to the remnants of the ancient Lake
Bonneville, the trappers and traders, and the Mormon Pioneers.
The tour will include interesting high points of Salt Lake City--
Temple Square, the Beehive House, State Capitol, and Trolley
Square.
THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1990 TOURS
Lion House Dinner and the Tabernacle Choir Rehearsal
5:00-101:30 p.m.
Dinner at the Lion House, Brigham Young's restored home (Salt Lake
City's pioneer president of the Mormon Church), open only to
private parties with limited seating. The evening will aiso
include an opportunity to visit with a member of the Mormon
Tabernacle Choir who will share her personal experiences as a choir
member before walking over to the Tabernacle to hear the choir
rehearse.
Old Deseret Dinner and The Tabernacle Choir Rehearsal
5:00-10:30 p.mi.
Dinner at Old Deseret, a restored pioneer village, with light
western entertainment and an opportunity to visit with a member of
the Mormon Tabernacle Choir who will share her personal experiences
as a choir member before traveling to Temple Square to hear the

choir rehearse.
4
Genealogy Workshop and the Tabernacle Choir Rehearsal
5:00-10:30 p.m.
Roots-Genealogy Workshop at the Family History Library, the world's
largest genealogy library, where a professional genealogist will
help you begin your research. A pedigree chart will be sent to you
upon registration for the workshop. The chart needs to be filled
out and returned no later than June 1 to the offices of Conferences
& Institutes. The genealogist will identify three or four names
on the chart and where to find those family lines in the library.
Dinner will be on your own with different varieties of foods
available at a nearby downtown shopping,mail or restaurant. At 8
p.m. the guide will escort you to the choir rehearsal.
All tour participants should meet in the Cliff Lodge
4:45 p.m. The tours will leave promptly at 5:00 p.m.
WESTERN BBQ MENII
Ranch Style Salads with Condiments
Fresh Vegetables with Dip
Baked Potatoes
Corn on the Cob
Baked Beans
Corn Bread Muffins and Rolls
Apple Pie and Peach Cobbler
BBQ Chicken and BBQ Spare Ribs
HIKING TIPS
entrance at
The Wasatch is a heavily used and fragile area. Hikers must strive
to minimize their impact. Shortcutting switchbacks on the trails
damages vegetation and causes serious erosion. Much trail
maintenance labor goes into restoring areas damaged by
shortcutting. Hikers who prefer steeper trails can avoid the
switchbacks by choosing an alternative trail or a totally off-trail
route.
Each hiker must take responsibility for being physically prepared
and adequately equipped for the intended trip. Good physical
condition is not a prerequisite for hiking, and regular hiking is
an enjoyable way to exercise; however, hikers must select routes
that match their health and strength.
Hiking does not require a large investment in equipment,
a safe trip there are a few essentials, incliuding,:
* Good comfortable boots with adequate tread~.
* Extra clothing appropriate to the season.
* FULL water bottle.
* Sun glasses and sunscreen.
* A small pack to carry everything.
but for

As hikes become longer and more serious you will also need:
* A map or trail guide.
* Food including some extra for emergencies.
* Rain gear or other clothing for a change in,the weather.
* A small first aid kit.
* Insect repellent in July and August.
* A flashlight if there is any chance of a twilight return.
Normal atmospheric conditions result in a decrease in temperature
with altitude, and mountains generate their own weather. Air
passing over a mountain range is forced upward and cools as it
rises and~ expands. Colder air holds less water vapor, so moisture
condenses, forming clouds, rain, snow. The ridges and canyons also
redirect the surface winds and affect the local climate.
The climatic difference between the valley at 4300 feet and the
Brighton parking lot at 8700 feet is roughly comparable to a change
experienced when going north from Salt Lake City to central Canada
or parts of Alaska. In~mid: June, when the city is hot and dry, Alta
and Brighton are still buried in snow. Because of the change in
altitude, the air is much thinner and people not acclimatized may
suffer mild headaches, fatigue, loss of appetite, and
sleeplessness. To alleviate these symptoms, take it easy for 2-3
days, getting plenty of rest. Also eat lightly and avoid alcohol
for the first few days. Try also to stay as low as possible; avoid
going to the tram initially. After the initial 2-3 days, your body
should be fully acclimated and you can enjoy the beauty of the
mountains.
At high elevation, the mid-day sun is intense. The air directly
above a mountain becomes warmer than the surrounding air at the
same altitud'e and begins to rise. This rising air forms the
towering cumulus clouds which are often seen above the Wasatch on
an~ otherwise clear summer afternoon. They can produce anything
from an overcast to an incredibly violent thunderstorm mixed with
hail. Lightning is a special danger to hikers on summits and
ridges.
The physics are simple, but the magnitude of the effects resulting
from the great vertical relief must be experienced first-hand
before it is fully appreciated. I have started hiking on a bright,
hot summer afternoon and returned home drenched with rain, only to
discover that not a drop fell in the valley. I have sat on top of
Mount Olympus feeling chilled while wearing a pile jacket and
mountain parka, yet knowing there was shirtsleeve weather down~ in
the city. Taking proper clothing along is important at any time
of year.
You are unlikely to find drinking water on foothill hikes or on
trails that follow ridges or minor d'rainages. Water quality at
higher elevations in the Wasatch is generally good, but treating
lake and stream water is always recommended andprudent.

For short day hikes, carrying enough water for the full trip is
easiest. A quart bottle and maybe a canned beverage to enjoy with
lunch are enough in cool weather. For a long hike such as Twin
Peaks or Olympus in July and August, carry two or even three quarts
plus treatment chemicals.
INFORMATION FOR PRESENTERS
Each meeting room will be equipped~ with a screen and a 35mm
projector with a remote switch at the podium. An audiovisual
technician will! also be in the meeting room and will have a laser
pointer if you require one.
The slide preview room is located in the "Little Pine" room on
Level C. The hours are posted outside the room.
If you need an overhead projector, other AV support or assistance,
please,notify the conference staff at the conference registration
desk (Ext. 5277) or at the conference office ('"Red' Pine" room,
Level C., Ext. 5395).
If you are a poster presenter, poster presentations are located in~
the Magpie and Golden Cliff rooms on Level B. Each poster boardprovides an 8' x 4' space to display
your presentation. All
posters should be set up prior to 8:3& a.m. and taken down by 5:00,
p.m. Although the Cliff Lodge provides security for the hotel
guests, additional security will not be provided for the poster
area.

EXHIBITOR REGISTRATION LIST
AS OF MAY 31, 1990
Centers for Disease Control
Elizabeth Ramsey
1600 Clifton Rd., NE
Atlanta, GA 30333
Centers for Disease Control
Mary Moreman
160&Clifton Rd. NE
Atlanta, GA 30333
404-639-3888
Epicenter Software
Jonathan Buckley
Pa Box 90073
Pasadena, CA 91103
8'18-304-9487
Nat'l Center for Health Stats
Kathii Santini/Robert Bilgrad~
3700 East-West Highway
Hyattsville, MD 20715
301-43'6-6154
The Epidemiology Monitor
Virginia Mason
2560 Whisper Wind Ct.
Toswell, GA 30076
404-594-1613
Epidemiology Resources Inc
Nancy Dreyer
826 Boylston St.
Chestnut Hill, MA 02167
617-734-9100.
Oxford University Press
Jan Arrigo
200 Madison Ave
New York, NY 10016
212-679-6300
Tracers Comp of America
Robert Eisenberg
183 Waverly Ave.
Medford, NY 11763
516-654-0091
University of Buffalo
John Vena
2211 Main Str.
Buffalo, NY 14214
716-831-2975
Exhibitors will be located in
Wasatch A & B.

THE CLIFF
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LEVEL C
Meeting Roorns
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Front Desk
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Guest Servces
Conference Services
Art Gallery
Sundries Shop
Irnages
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Indicates Refreshment Areas

TWENTY'-THf,RD ANNUAL MEETING
SOCIETY FOR EPIDEMIOLOGIC RESEARCH
Snowbird, Utah
June 12-15, 199a
Tuesday, June 12, 1990
2:00 - 8:30 p-m, Superior A & 8 STUDENT SKILLS WORKSHOP
"How to Write a Successful Scientific Paper'
Della Mundy
-Publications and the Peer Review Process'
Peter Magee;,Drummond Rennie, Moyses SzkW
"Grants and the Grant Review Process'
John Potter, Jonathan Samet, Mac Stiles
5:00 - 9:00 p.m. Level C REGISTRATION
6:00 - 8:00 p.m. Conference Center WELCOMING RECEPTION
Terrace
Wednesday June 13, 1990
7:30 a.m. REGISTRATION
8:15 - 10:00 a.m. Ballroom II- III PLENARY SESSION.
Chair: Jonathan M. Samet
8:15 - 8:30 Welcome: Joseph L. Lyon
8:30 - 9:05
9:05 - 9:40
_9>G0 - 10:00
10!00- 10:30 a.m.
10:30a.m. - 12:00 noon
I. NUTRITION'METHODOLOGY
Chair: Mervyn Susser
10:30 Ballroom I
Allan Hiidesheim
"Possible interaction Between Herpes Simplex Type 2(HSV-2) and Human
Papiilomaviruses (HPV) Type 16/18 in the Development of Invasive Cervical
Cancer" (1)
Discussant: Thomas M. Becker
Helen P. Hazuda
"Structural Assimilation Explains the Different~Pattern of Myocardial Infarction
and Angina Pectoris in Mexican American (MA) and Non-Hispanic White
(NHW) Men" (2)
Discussant: Richard F. Hamman
Jonathan M. Samet, President;, SER
'Epid'emioiogy: To Lump or to Split'
COFFEE BREAK
CONTRIBUTED PAPER SESSIONS
Diabetes Study' (3)
N" I
Susan M. Shetterly
0
'A Comparison of Two Methods of Measuring Waist-to-hip Ratios (WHR) and
Their Associations With Glucose and Lipid Metabolism: The San Luis Valley
10:45
David J. Hunter.
"Measurement of Fatly Acid Intake by Subcutaneous Fat Aspirate, Food
Frequency Questionnaire, and Diet Records" (4)~

Page 2
111:00 Julie A. Mares-Perlman
11:15 'Evaluation of Non-response Associated1with the Use of Two Different Dietary
Intake Assessment Tools' (5)
R. Sue McPherson
11:30 'Reproducibility of Diet Histories in the Chicago Western Electric Study' (6).
Eric B. Rimm
11':45 'Reproducibility and Validity of a Self-administered Semiquantitative Food
Frequency Questionnaire in Male Health Professionals' (7)
Harold W. Kohl III
II.
10:30
HIP FRACTURE
Chair: John Baron
Maybfrd "Analytic Methods forAssessing Valid'Ry of Dietary Intake Instruments" (8)
Jan,Wienpahl I
10:45 'Body Mass Index, Alcohol Use, and Smoking in Relation to Hip Fracture in
Older: Populations' (9)
Michael C. Nevh
11:00 'Neuromuscular Risk Factors for Hip Fracture: A Prospedive Study' (10)
Christine M. Branche
11:15 'Psychoactive Medieations and the Risk of Hip Fracture Among the Elderfy' (1 i1).
Jane A. Cauley
96, 'Black-White Differences in Bone Density and Falls in Elderly Women' (12)
11:30 S.J! Jacobsen
11:45 "Race and Sex Differences in Mortality Following Fracture of the Hip: A
National Study of 712,054 Cases" (13)
Jack Goldberg
'Regional Variation in the Incidence of Hip Fracture Among White Persons
Aged 65 Years and Older in the United States: A Population-based Study;
1984-87" (14)
III.
10:30 OCCUPATIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
Chair: John S. Reif
Ballroom III
Patrick A. Hessel
10i45 "Occupational Noise Exposure and Blood Pressure - Longitudinal and Cross-
sectional Observations in a Group of Underground Miners"'(15)
Thomas Sinks
11:00 "A Retrospective Cohort Mortality Study of Worlters at a Capacitor Plant
Utilizing Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs)' (16)
Ellen F. Heineman
11:15 'Occupational Risk Factors for Multiple Myeloma among Danish Men" (17)
Zuofeng Zhang
'Abnormal Temperature at Work and Risk of'Testicular Cancer' (18), ZI-11
11i:30 Terry L Thomas ©
11 :45 Mortality among Women Vietman-era Veterans: A Preliminary Analvsis" (1i9)
S.A. Eisen N'
Ln
'A Co-twin Control Study of'the Effects of the Vietnam War on Physical Heahh' (20) Q
Ll
~

Page 3
IV. CANCER EPIDEMIOLOGY
Chair: Elizabeth Holly
10:30 Ballroom II Sally L. Glaser
10:45 "Time Trends iniHodgkin's Disease Incidence: The Role of Diagnostic
Accuracy" (21)
Mei-Lin M. Yu
1 1 :00 "Longer Survival and Later Recurrence among Obese Patients with Renal Cell
Carcinoma' (22),
Bob S. Carter
11:15 "Familial Aggregation of, Prostate Cancer' (23)
Martin Weinstock
11:30~ `Recall (Report),8ias and'Reliability in the Retrospective Assessment of'
Melanoma Risk' (24)
Seymour Grufferman
11:45 "The Role of Active Immunization in the Etiology ofiChifdhood Cancer:
Protective or Simply Proscribed?" (25)
Julianne Byrne
"Early Menopause after Treatment for Childhood or Adolescent Cancer' (26)
V. MATERNAL MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY
Chair: Polly Marchbanks
N:. 10:30, Superfbr A & B Lynne S. Wilcox
"Risk Factors for Hysterectomy after Tubal Sterilization" (27).
1i0!45 Priscilla L Young
'NatianallTrends in the Management of Tubal Pregnancy, 1970-1987" (28).
11:00 Delia Scholes
"Cigarette Smoking and Risk of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease" (29)
V,k1:15 Mari' Palta
"Pregnancy Complications and Chronic Lung Disease in the Premature
Neonate" (30),
11:30 Kathryn A. Hollenoach
'Reprod'uctive History and Abruptio Placentae' (31)
11:45 Hani K, Atrash,
"Maternal Mortality in the United'States, 1979 to 1986"(32)
12:30 - 2:00 p.m. POSTER SESSION I
PHARMACO EP IDEMIOLOGY
Golden Cliff Marie R. Griffin
and Magpie "NonsteroidaliAnti-inflammatory Drug U§e and Hospitalization for Peptic Ulcer
in Elderiy Persons" (33)
N
Julie E. Buring, 0
"Low-dose Aspirin for Migraine Prophylaxis: Findings from a Randomized Trial N
of US Physicians' (34), {rj
0
A. Chao Q
'Incidence of Cholelithiasis and Estrogen Replacement Therapy -- A Cohort ILI
Study" (35) to
~

Page 4
Dale P. Sandler
"Chronic Kidney Disease Risk Associated with Use of Non-steroidal Anti-
inflammatory Drugs" (36)
Millicent Eidson
"L-Tryptophan and EosMillicentEidsoninophilia-Myaigia Syndrome (EMS),in
New Mexico" (37)
REPRODUCTIVE EPIDEMIOLOGY
Donna D. Baird'
"Misdassification in Time-to-Pregnancy Data: Impact in Estimates of Risk' (38)
Barbara A. Pizacani
"Spontaneous Abortion and the Risk oflnfertility' (39)~
A11en J. Wilcox
"Seasonal Variations in the Risk of Earty Pregnancy Loss' (40)
Mary L Hediger
"Young Maternal Age and Parity: Effects on Pregnancy Outcome" (41)
Diana Petitti
"Reproductive Outcomes in Women Exposed to Malathion" (42)
Susan E. Barkan
'Heterogeneous Causation of Racial Disparities in Low Birth Weight Neonatal'
Mortatity' (43)
John R: Wilkins III
"Risk Factors for Preterm Delivery among a Cohort of Female Veterinarians" (44)
Heather E. Bryant
"Retrospect'rve T'ime-To-Conception Data in Fecundability Studies: Utility ot
Postnatal Histories' (45)
Carolyn D. Drews
"Epidemiology of Congenital Eye Defects" (46)
AdoBo Correa-Villasenor
"Heterogeneity of Etiology and Exposure, Nondifferential Misclassification and
Bias in the Study of Birth Defects" (47)
Laura Fenster
'J"Assodation of Caffeine Consumption During Pregnancy and Spontaneous
Abortion" (48)
Lorraine H. Malcoe
"Change in Maternal Residence Between Conception and Birth for Selected
Birth Anomalies and Controls' (49)
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE
Mary K. Serdula ~
"Alcohol and M'ortality' (50) N
Paoto Boffetta Cj
"Alcohol Drinking and Mortality among Men Enrolled in an American Cancer V1
Society Prospective Study" (51i) Q
CA
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