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4317.0 History & Politics of Regulating Harm: Tobacco, Lead, & Bisphenol ATuesday, November 6, 2007: 4:30 PM
Oral
We are increasingly aware of environmental threats to health, including the threats posed by hazardous commercial products. In this panel we trace the history of the debates about the safety of tobacco, lead-based paint products, and Bisphenol A, an important component of plastics. In each of the cases that the panel will explore, industry fought regulation, engaging in a multi-pronged attack on public health and science while launching appeals to the public that touted the products' safety. This panel uses the history of struggle over three very different products to underscore the role of politics in the regulation and amelioration of exposure to hazardous commercial products. The rich histories of how risk was constructed and scientific evidence marshaled by players both inside and outside of industry are central to understanding ongoing debates and legal challenges about who must be held accountable for harms and how these industries can be regulated.
Session Objectives: Recognize the role of politics in the regulation and amelioration of exposure to hazardous commercial products.
Apply a historical framework to the analysis of contemporary policy regarding the regulation and amelioration of hazardous commercial products.
Assess the construction of risk in the hands of industry and public health.
Assess the use of scientific evidence by industry and public health.
Organizer:
David Rosner, PhD, MPH
Moderator:
David Rosner, MPH, PhD
4:30 PM
See individual abstracts for presenting author's disclosure statement and author's information. Organized by: Medical Care
CE Credits: CME, Health Education (CHES), Nursing
See more of: Medical Care
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