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Main Title Hyping health risks : environmental hazards in daily life and the science of epidemiology /
Author Kabat, Geoffrey C.
Publisher Columbia University Press,
Year Published 2008
OCLC Number 202541380
ISBN 9780231141482; 0231141483; 9780231511964; 0231511965
Subjects Health risk assessment--Social aspects--United States ; Epidemiology ; Environmental health ; Santé environnementale--âEtats Unis d'Amérique ; âEvaluation du risque--âEtats Unis d'Amérique ; âEpidémiologie--âEtats Unis d'Amérique ; Environnement--âEvaluation du risque--Aspect social--âEtats-Unis ; Risques pour la santé--Aspect social--âEtats-Unis ; Maladies de l'environnement ; Environmental Health--United States ; Risk Assessment--United States ; Epidemiology--United States
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
EKBM  RA566.27.K33 2008 Research Triangle Park Library/RTP, NC 07/27/2009
Collation xvi, 250 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Notes
"A Caravan book"--Title page verso. Includes bibliographical references (pages 221-238) and index.
Contents Notes
Introduction : toward a sociology of health hazards in daily life -- Epidemiology : its uses, strengths, and limitations -- Does the environment cause breast cancer? -- Electromagnetic fields : the rise and fall of a "pervasive threat" -- The science and politics of residential radon -- The controversy over passive smoking : a casualty of the "tobacco wars" -- Conclusion. The media constantly bombard us with news of health hazards lurking in our everyday lives. But many of these hazards turn out to have been greatly overblown. According to author and epidemiologist Geoffrey C. Kabat, this hyping of low-level environmental hazards leads to needless anxiety and confusion on the part of the public about which exposures have important effects on health and which are likely to have minimal or no effect. Kabat approaches health scares as "social facts" and shows that a variety of factors can contribute to the inflaming of a hazard. ... By means of four case studies, Kabat demonstrates how a powerful confluence of interests can lead to overstating or distorting scientific evidence. He examines the health risks of pollutants sucha s DDT as a cause of breast cancer, electromagnetic fields from power lines, radon within residences, and secondhand tobacco smoke. Tracing the trajectory of each of these hazards from its initial emergence to the present, Kabat shows how publication of more rigorous studies and critical assessments ultimately helped put the hazard in perspective.--Book jacket flap.