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IJE Advance Access originally published online on December 2, 2004
International Journal of Epidemiology 2005 34(2):251-256; doi:10.1093/ije/dyh372
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Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiological Association © The Author 2004; all rights reserved.

Article

Cohort Profile: The Whitehall II study

Michael Marmot* and Eric Brunner

International Centre for Health and Society, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, 1–19 Torrington Place, London WC1E 6BT, UK

* Corresponding author. E-mail: m.marmot@ucl.ac.uk

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.


    How did the study come about?
 
The Whitehall studies have come to be closely associated with the investigation of socioeconomic differences in physical and mental illness and mortality: the social gradient. 1,2 That was not the initial purpose of the first Whitehall study. Donald Reid and Geoffrey Rose set up Whitehall, in the 1960s, as a kind of British Framingham: 3 ‘Framingham’ insofar as it was a longitudinal study of cardiorespiratory disease and diabetes, looking at individual risk factors for disease; ‘British’ in that it was done on the cheap—a simple screening examination with follow-up limited to deaths identified from the National Health Service Central Registry.

Socioeconomic differences were initially not on the agenda. In the 1970s there was a small group of researchers who continued the British tradition that went back to William Farr in the nineteenth century of examining social inequalities in health. 4 For the most part, within epidemiology, ‘social class’ was not an object of . . . [Full Text of this Article]


    Who set Whitehall II up, and why, and how was it funded?
 

    What does Whitehall II cover and how has it changed?
 

    Who is in the sample?
 

    How often have participants been followed up?
 

    What has been measured?
 

    What is attrition like?
 

    What has been found? Key findings and key publications
 

    What are the main strengths and weaknesses?
 

    Can I get hold of the data? Where can I find out more?
 

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