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Environmental Health Risks and Public PolicyEnvironmental Health Risks and Public Policy

Environmental Health Risks and Public Policy1994

David V. Bates

About this book

Modern industrial societies have created not only the goods and services that add productivity and pleasure to modern life, but also hazardous and unlooked-for side effects. Many significant technological advances - automobiles, fire retardation, durable paints, electrical appliances - have a dark side, their proven or putative implication in major risks to public health. How democratic societies discover and deal with such health hazards is the theme of Environmental Health Risks and Public Policy. Often frightening in its direct recitation of medical evidence, always compelling as the work of a medical man deeply concerned with human health, it examines the ways in which science and public policy interact, sometimes to protect the public, sometimes to thwart prompt action. Environmental Health Risks and Public Policy compares decision making in Canada, Britain, and the United States, and the impact of different political traditions on the process. The book offers conclusions about the central role of environmental epidemiology as the "detective" science in elucidating health effects of human technological advances, and examines the different, often conflicting, sometimes colluding roles of government, industry, and the general public in the debate over public health hazards.

Details

First published
1994
OL Work ID
OL3456007W

Subjects

Environmental healthGovernment policyHealth risk assessmentDecision makingPlanningEnvironmental policyEnvironmental policy, united statesRisk AssessmentGovernmentHealth Policy

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