Toxic Circles
Environmental Hazards from the Workplace into the Community
When men and women who work with toxic materials get sick, everyone needs to worry. The toxic circles of industrial hazards spread in successive waves outward: from the workplace to the home, to the neighborhood, and to the community at large. These compelling essays tell how the links between cancers and working with radium, waxes, and dyes were uncovered and how poisoning from lead, mercury, dioxin, and chromium in and around the factory was detected. They document how corporations, government agencies, courts, unions, physicians, workers, and citizens have tried to ignore, evade, and finally battle the terrible legacy of industrial disease. The book focuses on New Jersey, the heart of industrial America, where three centuries of experience with occupational and environmental disease offer hard-earned lessons to the rest of the country and the world.
Many of the contributors bring a direct personal involvement in the stories they have to tell. For example, Michael Gordon and Lynn D. Kelly represented workers and community in a major lawsuit against Diamond Shamrock over dioxin contamination; Ellen K. Silbergeld, Ph.D., a scientist at the University of Maryland, was an expert witness in the trial. Helene A. Stapinski was the reporter with The Jersey Journal who broke the story about chromium contamination in Jersey City. Dr. John J. Thorpe and Dr. John G. Lione, corporation physicians in the oil refining industry, report on their own and their predecessors' efforts to prevent scrotal cancer in wax pressmen. Dr. Richard P. Wedeen has sought better ways to detect and prevent lead poisoning. Other contributors are: David Michaels, Ph. D., M.P.H., William D. Sharpe, M.D., Christopher C. Sellers, M.D., Ph.D., and Francis P. Chinard, M.D.
For anyone concerned with the environment, toxic hazards, and public health, this book will be essential reading.
Hatters' shakes / Helen E. Sheehan and Richard P Wedeen
Dioxin at diamond: A case study in occupational/environmental exposure / Ellen K. Silbergeld, Michael Gordon, and Lynn D. Kelly
Colorfast cancer: The legacy of corporate malfeasance in the U.S. dye industry / David Michaels
Scrotal cancer in wax pressman / John J. Thorpe and John G. Lione
The New Jersey radium dial workers: Seventy-five years later / William D. Sharpe
The politics of lead / Richard P. Wedeen
Tainted gold : Chromium contamination in Hudson County / Helen A. Stapinski
"A prejudice which may cloud the mentality": an overview of the birth of the modern science of occupational disease / Christopher C. Sellers
History, occupational health, and Medical education / Francis P. Chinard