Document XR18Qv7QM5kXEJgV2OpGNqXoB
HEALTH / PAC
BULLETIN Policy HeaAdlvitsohry
Center
No. 61 November / December 1974
1 Asbestos Research:
WINNING THE BATTLE BUT LOSING THE
WAR. Half a century of medical research re-
veals industry's scientific strategy minimize -
the problem and shift the blame.
7 Oil Refineries:
IT'S ALWAYS GRAVEYARD SHIFT. Changes
in technology profit the owners and disable
the workers.
28 Vital Signs
31 Peer Review
D
Asbestos Research
THEW IBNANTINTGL EWh
en When it it comes to coverups, the leaders of
BUT LOSING US industry make the Watergate conspir-
THE WAR ators look like a bunch of amateurs. While
the Watergate coverup quickly was un-
covered, industry has been successfully en-
gaged in covering up occupational and en-
vironmental hazards for decades. In so doing
it has used medical science to back up its
traditional weapons of economic and polit-
ical power.
The tobacco industry, for example, re-
sponded to reports of a link between smok-
ing and lung cancer by funding scientists
whose studies invariably found smoking safe
Plympton
or the evidence for a link to cancer incon-
clusive. (1) When this tactic no longer
worked, industry poured more money into
research to fund studies that would draw at-
tention away from the obvious problem, how
to curb cigarette consumption. In 1972 indus-
try spent $ 23 million on research compared
to $ 2 million spent by the US government.
1 (, 2) As a case in point, Harvard Medical
School recently accepted a $ million 23 -
grant
from eight tobacco companies to study " en-
vironmental influences on the lung " and " co-
factors " that may trigger lung damage from
smoking. (3) By the very definition of the
problem, the results of the study, no matter
what their technical quality, cannot help but
shift attention away from smoking itself.
The plastics industry recently engaged in
a classical coverup of polyvinyl chloride
hazards. It simply suppressed information for
three years that polyvinyl chloride causes
liver cancer in rats. 4 (, 5) Only when three
workers died of liver cancer in B.F. Good-
rich's Louisville, Kentucky plant did industry
finally admit knowledge of the hazard.
The granddaddy of occupational health
coverups, however, is the coverup by the as-
bestos industry of asbestos hazards. A Lon-
don physician first reported asbestos disease
back in 1900. (6) A historical review of re-
search papers on the subject since then re-
veals industry's strategy: Ignore the prob-
lem, then minimize or deny it and when all
else fails try to shift the blame.
But industry cannot pursue its aims with-
out help from others doctors --
, research scien-
tists and academic institutions. In the case of
asbestos, scientists and institutions whose re-
search was funded by industry have consist-
ently found asbestos blameless or not a seri-
ous hazard, while those not so funded have
just as consistently found it to be a danger-
ous, unhealthy material.
What strategems were used by medical
scientists to design and execute studies that
apparently exonerated asbestos? How and
where did industry locate these pliant indi-
viduals? What impediments did non industry -
scientists face in gathering information on
this occupational hazard? And why didn't
the non industry -
scientists bring this situa-
tion to public attention sooner?
The answers to these questions illustrate
the extent to which occupational and envi-
ronmental health science is for sale in this
country. In a more subtle way, they indicate
STATEMENT REQUIRED BY THE ACT OF AUGUST 12,
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how industry sponsored -
research shapes the
way scientists look at a problem. Thus even
those not biased in favor of industry must
work in a scientific context largely shaped
by industry - refuting objections raised by in-
dustry, examining questions posed by indus-
try, battling with scientists paid by industry.
And this takes place within an even larger
social and economic context dominated by
industry's vast resources of money, influence
and information.
Under these circumstances scientists who
have not sold themselves to industry have
often desperately tried to pursue neutral sci-
entific inquiries in a social setting that is any-
thing but neutral. Not understanding how
industry controls the contours of the situation,
they generally, as we shall see, limited their
debate to scientific journals while workers
and the general public were largely kept
unaware of the hazards that had been un-
covered, thus allowing industry to continue
on its merry way.
The evidence in support of these conclu-
sions was gleaned from a study of over 200
medical articles on asbestos published in the
US, Canada and Great Britain before 1974.
These represent the vast majority of papers
printed on the subject in the English lan-
guage. Papers were located and designated
as industry sponsored -
or not according to
procedures listed in the Note on Method.
Roughly one third -
were funded by industry.
ASBESTOSIS:
THE FIRST COVERUP
Asbestosis is a lung disease similar to
coalminers'black lung, caused by scar tis-
sue forming around asbestos fibers trapped
in the lungs. Its earliest symptoms appear
mild a slight, persistent cough and short-
ness of breath upon exertion. It usually de-
velops about ten or more years after the
victim's first exposure to asbestos dust. If
dust exposure continues, the disease can
eventually lead to serious lung damage and
death, triggered either by common pulmo-
nary infections or by heart failure from over-
work of the organ in pumping blood through
the diseased lungs.
Ignoring the Problem
For three decades the asbestos industry
simply ignored reports of occupational dis-
ease from the so called -
" magic mineral. " The
first case of asbestosis was diagnosed by a
London physician in 1900. (6) The doctor did
not even see fit to publish this medical first
in a scientific journal; he just reported it to
a government commission, which interred
the report in its official records. (7) It lay
unknown to the medical community for more
than two decades.
But what doctors did not know, the asbes-
tos industry certainly did. In 1918, US and
Canadian insurance companies stopped sell-
ing personal life insurance policies to as-
bestos workers (-a 8) fact of which Johns-
Manville and other asbestos manufacturers
must certainly have been aware. Many
workers, according to later physicians're-
ports, discovered the hazards of the job soon
after being hired and left shortly (9, 10) -
again a fact which the companies must have
known.
The medical profession rediscovered as-
bestosis in 1924, when Dr. W. E. Cooke re-
ported in the British Medical Journal the
death of a 33 year - - old woman who had
worked since age 13 in an asbestos factory.
(11) On autopsy, he found massive deposits
of asbestos dust in the woman's lungs.
Eleven more such case studies were pub-
lished in Great Britain during the 1920's.
They were reported by pathologists at hospi-
tals in London and Wigan and at medical
schools in Leeds and Durham. Many victims
Published by the Health Policy Advisory Center, 17 Murray Street, New York, N.Y. 10007. Telephone (212) 267-8890. The Health /
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94110. Telephone (415) 282-3896. Associates: Robb Burlage, Morgantown, W. Va.; Constance Bloomfield, Desmond Callan,
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Long Island; Judy Carnoy, San Francisco; Susan Reverby, Boston, Mass, BULLETIN illustrated by Bill Plympton. 1974.
3
had prior cases of tuberculosis and died
within a few years of being hired. But in
some cases asbestosis was found at autopsy
with no sign of tuberculosis, unequivocally
implicating asbestos itself as a cause of the
disease. (12, 13)
On this side of the Atlantic, the first case
history of asbestosis in the United States was
reported in 1930 at the Mayo Clinic, where an
autopsy on a cardiac victim revealed heart
failure due to asbestosis. (14) In the same
year a pathologist at Yale reported another
case. (15) By 1935 a total of 28 asbestosis
cases had been reported in Great Britain
and the United States. (16)
Minimizing the Problem
After years of doing nothing, the US as-
bestos industry in 1929 responded to the
drumbeat of medical reports by commission-
ing the Metropolitan Life Insurance Com-
pany to conduct a study on asbestosis. (17)
Met Life was assisted by the Department of
Public Health at McGill University in Mon-
treal (18), whose cozy relationship with the
asbestos industry will be discussed later in
this article.
Medical examinations were conducted be-
tween 1929 and 1931, but the results were
not published until 1935. A total of 126 as-
bestos workers were selected at random
from five plants and mines in the US and
Canada, mostly Johns Manville -
facilities.
67 of the 126 workers examined were classi-
fied as positive cases of asbestosis, 39 as
doubtful and only 20 as completely free of
any sign of asbestosis. (17) On their face,
these figures represent an epidemic of dis-
ease. Calculated as percentages, the find-
ings showed 53 percent of the workers hav-
ings asbestosis, 84 percent with some signs
of disease (positive plus doubtful) and only
16 percent with no signs of asbestosis at all.
Amazingly enough, however, the authors
did not even publish these percentages, so
devastating is their impact. Rather, they
simply listed the number of workers in each
category and hurried on without comment.
Short of suppressing the data, they could
have done no less.
In addition to minimizing the incidence of
disease, the authors also minimized its se-
verity. Time and again, the authors reiter-
ated that the workers appeared healthy, that
they were not disabled. Yet their own paper
4
presents evidence to the contrary. Out of 121
physical examinations, 96 workers (79 per-
cent) complained of persistent coughing or
shortness of breath, typical early symptoms
of asbestosis. But the authors summarily dis-
miss the response: " Too much emphasis
should not be placed on statements of sub-
jective symptoms. "
The US government served as handmaiden
to industry in this case by publishing the
Met Life study as a Public Health Report of
the US Public Health Service. This gave the
study the imprimatur of the federal govern-
ment despite its genesis in industry, its in-
dustry funding and its appalling pro indus- -
try bias. (17) Few actions more clearly illus-
trate the interlock between industry and
government.
Science and Politics
In 1931, the British government made as-
bestosis a compensable disease under its
workmen's compensation laws, and some
preventive measures were taken to limit
worker exposure to asbestos fibers. In the
US, where both workmen's compensation
and occupational health programs were un-
der state jurisdiction, similar actions were
not taken until the 1960's.
More important, in neither country did the
hazards of asbestos become a major public
issue during the 1920's and 1930's. Discus-
sion was largely confined to scholarly medi-
cal journals and later to government bu-
reaucracies. The doctors and scientists who
uncovered asbestosis did not draw out its
economic and political implications in their
published papers, although such journals
were their main national and international
forum for presenting their findings. To be
sure, almost all the papers reflected a hu-
mane concern for the afflicted workers. But
occasional appeals for help in dealing with
the problem were invariably directed to in-
dustry, whose self interest -
was to minimize
the hazard and clamp a lid on a public dis-
cussion that might alarm workers and cus-
tomers. Instead of quixotic appeals to indus-
try, what was called for was public, political
discussion on controlling the hazards of as-
bestos eliminating -
all unnecessary uses of
the material and controlling exposure when
its use was mandatory.
This failure to develop public debate
about asbestos planted the seeds of our
present failure to cope with the problem. To-
day asbestos, with its thousands of uses in
homes and industry, has insinuated itself so
thoroughly into daily life that it is difficult
to conceive of eliminating its widespread
use any more than we can contemplate
giving up the automobiles that pollute our
air and waste our energy resources.
But back in the 1920's and early 1930's,
when asbestosis reared its head as the first
of many asbestos health hazards, the asbes-
tos industry was small and the uses of the
material still limited. Manufacture of asbes-
tos in commercial quantities only began in
the first decades of this century - Johns-
Manville was founded in 1901 (20) and the
largest British Company, Turner Brothers, in
1916. (21) World production of asbestos in
1920 was only 200,000 tons, 5 percent of
present production. In 1925 Johns Manville's -
total sales were only 40 $ million. (20) And as
late as 1933, according to a British govern-
ment report, only 35,000 to 40,000 people
throughout the world worked with asbestos.
(22)
Before World War I transite water pipe
(water pipe strengthened by asbestos) had not
yet been developed; today it is the single
major use of asbestos. Asbestos insulation
for ships did not come into widespread use
until the shipbuilding boom during World
War II, when several million shipyard work-
ers were exposed, many with dire conse-
quences. (23)
LUNG CANCER:
MORE OF THE SAME
In 1935 two doctors at the Medical College
of South Carolina reported an autopsy on an
asbestos worker who had both asbestosis
and lung cancer. (24) Other cases followed,
and by 1942 ten had been reported. (25) It
appeared that the incidence of lung cancer
Note On Method
A study was made of about 200 medical
articles on asbestos published in the United
States, Canada and Great Britain before 1974.
The search was begun using bibliographies
published in the 1972 NIOSH criteria docu-
ment on asbestos (8), the 1971 National
Academy of Science report on asbestos (59)
and a computer search of materials in the
New York State medical library system. These
were supplemented by references found in
the original articles. All but about 30 refer-
ences were found. Articles were designated as
industry sponsored -
if one or more of the au-
thors gave a company address in the paper.
if a grant from an industry or an industrial as-
sociation was acknowledged in the paper or
if the paper was part of a series in which the
initial paper acknowledged industry support.
In a very few cases papers were listed as in-
dustry sponsored -
when they were reported as
such in " History of Johns Manville -
Research, "
published by the company for the 1972 OSHA
hearings on asbestos (18), even though the
papers themselves did not acknowledge this
support. (This omission has occurred more
often in recent years as asbestos has come
under increasing attack as a health hazard.)
Papers reported at international confer-
ences were excluded from the tally of indus-
try and non industry -
articles since new ma-
terial was invariably published elsewhere in
the literature and many papers comprised
general talks that offered no new data.
5
--
among asbestosis victims was unusually
high, leading to the suspicion that asbestos
causes cancer as well as asbestosis. Since the
asbestos industry was already under attack
in the 1930's because of asbestosis, it did
not ignore these reports as it had done so
long for asbestosis but quickly shot back a
denial that asbestos causes lung cancer.
Denying the Problem
The industry position was presented in a
1938 paper by Arthur Vorwald and John
Karr (26) of Saranac Laboratory, a tubercu-
losis facility in upstate New York. The paper
did not speak of industry sponsorship, but
the relationship among Vorwald, Saranac
and the asbestos industry was longstanding.
Between 1930 and 1946 Saranac was the
site of animal studies by L. U. Gardner,
funded by the Quebec Asbestos Mining As-
sociation (QAMA), on the effect of asbestos
on tubercular and normal lungs. (27, 28)
After Gardner's death in 1946, Vorwald be-
came director of the Laboratory and con-
tinued Gardner's animal studies under
QAMA sponsorship. (29) Johns Manville -
Cor-
poration in its History of Johns Manville -
Re-
search points proudly to its long association
with Saranac.
Vorwald and Karr dismissed the case stud-
ies linking lung cancer with asbestosis be-
cause the group of workers examined,
asbestosis victims, were not a typical, ran-
dom group of asbestos workers. It was quite
possible, they argued, that asbestosis vic-
tims might be especially susceptible to lung
cancer.
Based on medical knowledge at that time,
the Vorwald and Karr argument could not
be dismissed out of hand. Scientists could
not definitely prove or disprove the lung
cancer asbestos -
link based only on case
studies of asbestosis victims. What was
clearly called for was a large scale -
, plant-
wide study - an epidemiological study in
which an entire population of workers em-
ployed at some particular date was followed
for a period of years and all cases of dis-
ease recorded. But the Catch - 22 was that the
asbestos companies had custody of the per-
sonnel records on which such a study would
necessarily be based, and they did not want
the study to be conducted. Scientists did not
protest the industry's denial of access to this
information or insist in their scientific papers
6
that epidemiological studies be carried out.
True to their professional codes, they kept
silent. So nothing happened - except 20 more
years of growing profits for the asbestos
industry.
Despite more evidence of lung cancer
among asbestosis victims after World War II
(30, 31), industry kept silent. Then in 1955 a
British scientist conducted the plant - wide
study that was clearly called for in 1938,
and found an unusually high rate of lung
cancer among all asbestos workers. (32) The
scientist, who was a member of England's
prestigious Medical Research Council, drew
his data from records kept by the British
government after enacting legislation on as-
bestos in 1931.
Still Denying the Problem
In what for them was a lightning fast
response, the Quebec Asbestos Mining Asso-
ciation commissioned a study the next year
of lung cancer among asbestos miners in
Quebec. This was 21 years after the first
reports linking asbestos and lung cancer.
What industry badly wanted was a white-
wash job and -
it got one.
The study was conducted under a QAMA
grant by the Industrial Hygiene Foundation
(IHF, now called the Industrial Health Foun-
dation). IHF, located in Pittsburgh, performs
occupational health studies for corporations.
It is openly pro management -
(see BULLETIN,
September, 1972), and is supported almost
entirely by major US industries. Within the
last decade it has become affiliated with the
Carnegie - Mellon Institute, a small, presti-
gious university in Pittsburgh, and has main-
tained close ties to the Department of Indus-
trial Health at the University of Pittsburgh.
(Most IHF senior staff hold appointments at
the University of Pittsburgh.)
As in the asbestosis case, the contrast is
striking between the enormous size and
scope of this experiment and that of the non-
industry case studies - a fact that lent credi-
bility to the industry study. The IHF investi-
gation was an epidemiological study of a
group of 6,000 asbestos miners from the two
largest mines in Quebec. All workers with
five or more years of exposure who were on
the employment rolls in 1940 were followed
until 1955, and their medical records, death
certificates and insurance records examined
for evidence of lung cancer.
(Continued on page 20)
Oil Refineries
IT'S
The petroleum industry is hated by millions ALWAYS ALWAYS
of Americans. Oil soaked -
beaches, air pollu- GRAVEYARD
tion, high prices and exorbitant profits are SHIFT
among the abundant reasons for the public's
justified anger.
Oil refinery workers have also traditionally
not been enthralled with the industry. A pri-
mary reason is that refinery workers spend
much of their lives working amidst toxic
fumes, vapors and dusts, oppressive heat
and deafening noise. Most directly of all
Americans, they face the lethal consequences
of the industry's drive for maximum produc-
tion.
The oil companies attempt to instill an im-
age of oil refinery operations as devoid of hu-
man labor power. While this image is untrue
-almost 90,000 workers are now employed in
US refineries and more will be in the future
due to new construction - it serves a useful
purpose for the industry; this image conceals
the fact that technological progress under
capitalism has brought not safer workplaces
but increased disease and death.
Bill Phampton
The Bad Old Days
Refineries operating at the turn of the Cen-
tury were extremely hazardous places. The
occupational dangers of running a new indus-
trial technology involving flammable liquids
and vapors at extreme temperatures and pres-
sures were learned through experience. Ex-
plosions and fires were frequent.
On the 15th of July, 1915, the still cleaners
at Standard Oil's Bayonne, New Jersey re-
finery walked off their jobs. (A still is a dis-
tillation chamber.) They struck in part over
demands for better working conditions. Five
days after the strike began, the New York
Times reported that even the scab still clean-
ers hired by Standard had quit because they
" found those conditions unbearable. " () 1 The
still cleaner's job was particularly perilous.
Dressed in an asbestos suit for protection
from heat as high as 250 degrees Farenheit,
it was their responsibility to chip away at the
coke that remained on the surfaces of the
chamber once the gasoline had been sepa-
rated out. Paid 2.00 $ to 2.40 $ a day for their
labor, stillmen probably developed black 7
lung, the disease of the coal miner, from con-
stant exposure to coke dust.
The workers at the Bayonne refinery struck
because the company forced them to enter
the stills before they were safely cooled. For
every minute the stills were shut down, Rock-
efeller and Standard Oil lost profits. The strike
was eventually lost by the workers, whose
ranks were broken by the company through
the use of an army of strikebreakers, police
and the courts. The strike left nine workers
dead and about 50 injured. Still it was the
beginning of strikes in the oil industry for
safe working conditions.
In the not good - so -
old days, exposure to
hazards was not limited to the still workers.
A corporate history of Standard Oil of Indi-
una describes another process at the refinery
as follows: " The noxious sulphur dioxide pro-
duced in roasting the copper sulphide and the
fine floating dust made the millhouse an in-
ferno. It was the dirtiest and most unhealthy
work in the refinery.... The work was done
mostly by foreigners. Workmen had to wear
respirators, and most men could stand only a
few days of it. If they stayed too long, the
fumes ate the skin off their faces, turned their
hair green, and made their eyes bloodshot.
One of the great curiosities about the refinery
was an old white horse that hauled the cop-
per sulphide to the dump. Its white hair had
turned green. " (2)
" I think you need recognition
of the fact that every plant is
in business to make money,
and it takes a team effort. Oil is
not our product; money is. "
William Miller, Sun Oil Company
National Petroleum Refiners Association
1973 Refinery Maintenance Conference
In 1941, H. N. Blakeslee, then Director of the
Department of Accident Prevention for the
American Petroleum Institute, the industry's
trade association, looked back at early re-
finery work: " Twenty - five years ago it was
customary for men cleaning tanks to work
in relays. Each man came out of the tank as
8
he became dizzy from breathing the vapour.
He would rest for a short time until his dizzi-
ness had passed and then replace some other
man in the tank. Occasionally, a man stayed
too long and had to be dragged out and re-
vived by artificial respiration, that is, if some-
one were present who knew how to perform
artificial respiration..... Some refineries even
maintained rescue squads to do the rescue
and resuscitation work. An individual at-
tached to one of these squads says that res-
cues became so common that they ceased
to be exciting. " (3) One of the few statistical
indications of the high refinery accident rates
at that time came from the Baytown, Texas
oil refinery of Humble Oil Company, where in
1920 there were 2,266 accidents among a
thousand employees. (4)
The Worse New Days
In the old days a typical oil refinery was
identified by the great black clouds of dense
smoke pouring forth from its stacks. Today
refineries look a lot cleaner with little visible
evidence of pollution.
Open tanks of toxic chemicals have gen-
erally been replaced by mazes of pipelines
and closed vessels. Because oil may continu-
ously flow from one unit to another by push-
ing a button, there is thought to be less work-
er exposure to dangerous chemicals. For
those workers who, like the stillmen and tank
cleaners of old, are exposed to toxic agents,
modern respirators offer protection.
Despite this reassuring appearance, oil re-
fineries may actually be more dangerous
workplaces today than they were in the first
half of the 20th Century. Not only do workers
still face the likelihood of fire and explosion,
they are also exposed daily to a vast array
of toxic agents, among them chemicals that
can asphyxiate and produce skin and lung
diseases and cancer.
These occupational safety and health prob-
lems have become more severe since World
War II. During and immediately after the war
years, new processes based on new tech-
nology were introduced to increase produc-
tion of petroleum products. Yet after the
widespread use of the new technology began
and refineries grew in size, the industry dras-
tically reduced the size of the refinery work-
force and the level of maintenance. While
these two factors account for the occupation-
al dangers of the American oil refinery, a
more basic explanation is the profit maximiz-
ing goal of industry.
Between 1946 and 1971, United States con-
sumption of petroleum products rose from un-
der five million barrels per day to over 15
million barrels per day, an increase of 200
percent. (5) This growth reflects increased de-
mand created by World War II and the Kor-
ean War for high octane -
aviation fuel; in-
creased air travel, which brought greater de-
mand for kerosene - based turbine fuel; the re-
placement of coal with oil; and construction
of large buildings that used residual fuel oil
for heating. War Post -
highway construction
increased demand for asphalt, and the devel-
opment of a huge petrochemical industry-
making thousands of petroleum - based prod-
ucts, from plastics to synthetic fibers, out of
feedstocks such as liquefied petroleum gas-
also contributed to industry growth.
The single most important reason for the
growth in demand of petroleum products,
however, has been the increasing reliance on
motor vehicles as the dominant means of
transportation. In 1940, the motor vehicle to
people ratio was 1 4:; in 1950, 1 3:; and by 1970,
1 1.9:. (6) This trend resulted in an increase of
over 200 percent in gasoline demand between
1946 and 1971. (7)
Technological change and expansion of
capacity have enabled U.S. refineries to in-
crease their input by almost 225 percent be-
tween 1946 and 1971. (8) Thus an understand-
ing of the industries'new health and safety
hazards depends upon an understanding of
the technological changes responsible for in-
creased production and profits.
Technology to the Rescue
Before World War II, the petroleum indus-
try's profits were limited by relatively simple
refining techniques; only a very limited quan-
tity of hydrocarbons suitable for direct use
in high octane -
aviation fuel and motor gaso-
line could be refined out of a barrel of crude
oil. But with large military demands for avia-
tion fuel and with vehicle motor -
gasoline in
short supply and high future demand being
predicted, the industry developed the tech-
nology to produce increasingly profitable
" light ends, " such as gasoline and natural
gas, and less of the not profitable - so -
heating
oils, a trend that has continued to the present.
Of the new processing methods the most im-
portant has been catalytic cracking (cat crack-
ing).
The appeal of catalytic cracking to the in-
dustry is its ability to make more gasoline
more efficiently from a wide variety of feed-
stock materials. The method involves the
breaking down of large hydrocarbon mole-
cules into new compounds which may vary
from simple hydrogen gas to gasoline to
heavier fuels.
In this process, a catalyst and hot oil vapor
are mixed and then heated to a high temper-
ature in a large reactor vessel where the oil
breaks down into lighter products. Catalyst
and vapor are then separated, the catalyst
flowing into another large vessel, the regen-
erator, and the oil vapor further separated by
After the War, the government-
built refineries were sold to the
companies at or below cost.
distillation into its various fractions. In the
regenerator, the coke that had formed on the
catalyst during the earlier stage is burned
off. The regenerated catalyst is then recycled
to the reactor for more contact with oil vapor,
and the process begins again.
Catalytic cracking found its first applica-
tion during World War II in the manufacture
of aviation gasoline. Today it is the most im-
portant process used to make automotive
gasoline. The early history of the process'in-
troduction suggests why new technology in
the oil industry is associated with increased
work hazards.
In 1942 Standard Oil (New Jersey) built the
first commercial fluid catalytic cracker (FCC),
the type of cat cracker most commonly used
today, after cooperating on research and de-
velopment with six other oil companies. (9)
One estimate suggests that between 1928 and
1952, 50 $ million was spent on the develop-
ment of the fluid type unit alone. (10) The de-
velopment of the fluid catalytic cracker has
been described as a project smaller only than
the building of the atomic bomb. (11)
In the rush to get new units in operation,
some things were neglected. Errors in design
had to be corrected on units in service, not
just in future models. The impact on the
health of refinery workers brought about by
this new process would not be considered by
the industry until cat crackers had been op-
erating for a number of profitable years. Even
9
today, although catalytic cracking remains
the most important refinery process, all the
long term -
effects of these units on the health
of those working in or living near the refinery
are still not known. There are, however, some
worrisome clues.
Cat Cracking and Cancer
By the turn of the Century it was known
that exposure to certain petroleum products,
such as wax paraffin oils and cutting oils,
could cause cancer. (14)
In 1942, the same year the first commercial
catalytic cracking unit went into operation,
scientists at the Barnard Free Skin and Can-
cer Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri found that
samples of some high boiling catalytically
cracked oils caused cancer when applied to
the skin of mice. (15) In 1945 the carcinogenic
(causing cancer -
) properties of these oils were
confirmed in other experiments. (16) In 1947,
five years after the introduction of the cataly.
tic cracking unit, scientists in the Medical De-
partment of Jersey Standard Oil concluded
that "... a potential cancer hazard existed
where man came in contact with these oils. "
(17) And in 1951 Standard reported that meas-
ures for minimizing worker exposure to car-
cinogenic oils, such as better personal hy-
giene practices, keeping units closed and
painting pipelines containing these oils.
orange had been instituted. (18) While it is
unclear to what extent carcinogen exposure
was really minimized at Jersey refineries, it
is certain that other oil companies did little
or nothing to prevent contact with such po-
tentially hazardous hydrocarbons.
Yet the industry was worried about the
problem; it was one that could threaten its
use of what was fast becoming the most im-
portant and perhaps most profitable refinery
unit. Prodded by the earlier efforts of Jersey,
the American Petroleum Institute (API), the
industry's trade association, funded a study
in 1949 at the University of Cincinnati's Ket-
tering Laboratory to find out the cancer - caus-
ing potential of intermediate and finished pe-
troleum products. (19) To do this, the Ketter-
ing researchers experimented with mice and
surveyed company medical departments to
find whether cancer was a problem afflicting
refinery workers.
The Kettering scientists tested about 120
different oil fractions by applying them to the
skin of mice and then observed whether, and
10 within what period, cancer developed. Mice
rapidly developed cancer from some frac-
tions, confirming the results of previous re-
search by Standard. The primary carcino-
genic agents in these oils were found to be
certain polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.
According to the study, the new catalytic
cracking processes produced greater concen-
trations of these carcinogens than did the
older thermal cracking processes, which
were increasingly being replaced by cata-
lytic units. (20)
The most potent carcinogens - the ones that
most rapidly caused tumors in mice were --
lo-
cated in the heavy gas oils and residual prod-
ucts of catalytic cracking. A potential danger
also existed at all refinery units processing
oils distilling at over 675 degrees Farenheit
(including crude distillation), or near pipe-
lines transporting these fractions. In final
products, potent carcinogens were found in
the heavy gas oils used for fuel in power
plants, ships and large buildings.
The Subversion of Research
While experiments with mice and analysis
of carcinogens in petroleum fractions could
help define a potential health problem for hu-
mans, API's Medical Advisory Committee
wanted to know how many refinery workers
actually developed cancer. In 1950 the Com-
mittee sponsored an epidemiological study to
determine the number of workers who had
developed cancer. (21) The Kettering Lab col-
lected records of cancer cases from company
files and began a current case registry, a cen-
tral file for keeping and analyzing cancer
records as cases are found. Initially 1,200
cases were received from 14 companies. (22)
These cases formed the historical survey. Six
years later, only 2,108 individual case rec-
ords had been sent to the current case regis-
try. (23)
The low number of reported cases did not
prove that workers were at low risk; the ex-
planation was that the oil companies refused
and / or were unable to cooperate with the
study. In 1955 a report by the Subcommittee
on Carcinogenicity of the API's Medical Ad-
visory Committee, which supervised the proj-
ect, commented: " It is discouraging to
realize that only sixteen of twenty - five com-
panies have participated in this effort and
that in the last few years the number of par-
ticipants may have diminished even more
than this. For instance, in 1954 only twelve
companies participated in the epidemiologi-
cal studies.. i*
t must be recognized that if
participation does not continue in this proj-
ect it is doomed to failure through no fault
of Dr. Phair [the scientist at Kettering conduct-
ing the study), but strictly due to the failure
of cooperation on the part of the participating
companies and their medical directors on the
Medical Advisory Committee.... if we are
unable to obtain cooperation the epidemio-
logical studies might just as well be termin-
ated. " (24)
In 1956, the Medical Advisory Committee
ended the survey, concluding that there was
",.. no evidence of occupational cancer
within the population surveyed. " (25) Given
the small number of cases reported due to
the lack of company cooperation, the con-
clusion was inevitable. The conclusion also
reflected the fact that, whereas it may take
20 or even 30 years after exposure for can-
cer to be detected, the study ended in 1956,
ten years or so after the widespread use of
catalytic cracking began.
" The number of people
examined and found healthy
by our medical physicians
gives eloquent light to the fact
that this is not a hazardous
occupation. "
Dr. Harold Golz, Former Director
Committee on Medicine and Environmental
Health, American Petroleum Institute
21 June, 1973.
The Medical Advisory Committee, com-
posed of oil company medical directors, did
not seem particularly concerned, at least as
reflected in the Committee's minutes, about
the study's six years of wasted effort and the
fact that no conclusive results were reached.
But the scientists who had worked on the
project were concerned and were willing to
explain their failure. According to their re-
ports, now located in the API library, marked
" For Information Only - Not for Publication, "
there were two principal reasons why " ac-
tive steps could not be taken ": "... certain
of the companies had no centralized medical
department to collect the necessary data past
"
or future, " (26) and.. all outside or unusual
investigations were postponed because of the
high priority of technological changes in re-
fining operations brought about by the Kore-
an emergency. Consequently, it proved im-
possible to secure serious consideration of
simple requests for access either to records or
workers. " (27)
The first comment speaks for itself; some
company medical departments were conven-
iently useless. The second statement is a ra-
tionalization, the use of so called -
national se-
curity concerns to cover up corporate irre-
sponsibility. Even after the Korean War, in-
formation was not forthcoming from the com-
panies, and so the study had to be terminated.
Although much of the blame for the API
study's failure can be traced to its member
companies'uncooperativeness, some of it be-
longs to the shortsightedness of the scientists
who conducted the research. The most dis-
tressing shortcoming was their failure to con-
sult the workers themselves concerning con-
tact with possible cancer producing -
chemi-
cals. Despite the scientists'healthy suspicion
that certain hydrocarbons were likely to pro-
duce cancer, their abiding faith in the good
intentions of industry resulted in their falsely
assuming that "... high engineering stand-
ards and good housekeeping, with respect to
this modern automatic equipment has, in gen-
eral, restricted the contacts of workmen with
these products. " (28)
But had the scientists spoken to oil work-
ers, their suspicions would have been height-
ened and new research directions suggested.
They would, for example, have discovered
that cat crackers were not, as the industry
had claimed, totally closed systems. Pumps
and other equipment leaked oil mists and
vapors during normal operation. They also
would have discovered that during mainte-
nance shutdown, workers enter vessels and
clean pipelines where sludges or residues
containing potent carcinogens remain.
In 1947, before its cancer prevention pro-
gram began, Standard surveyed six of its
refineries to determine how many workers
were exposed to carcinogenic oils. It found
that lab personnel, sample collectors, dock
workers and tank - car loaders were subject to
daily exposure; that cracking unit operators,
tank cleaners and pilot plant operators were
exposed frequently; and that maintenance
mechanics and pipefitters were exposed
every few days. (29)
11
Today 30 years after the introduction of
cat cracking the extent of the cancer danger
to workers is still unknown. Certainly the in-
dustry has the economic resources to do bet-
ter. Industry profits from catalytic cracking
between 1942 and 1957 exceeded $ 350 mil-
lion. (30) In contrast, the API spent less than
$ 750,000 studying the hazards of cat crack-
ing. (31)
Although the actual extent of cancer among
refinery workers remains cloudy to this day,
some frightening new evidence has been
found about the health of people who lived
near refineries. In 1974, three scientists at the
University of Southern California School of
Medicine announced the results of a study
of cancer death rates among people living
near refineries in Los Angeles County. They
found that among males living in areas near
refineries and chemical plants in 1968 and
1969, 40 percent more than the norm died as
a result of lung cancer. (32)
Dark Future
That health and safety issues are not a ves-
tige of the past in the oil industry can again
be seen in the problems surrounding a cur-
rently intensifying hazard to oil workers-
the refining of high contented - sulfur -
crude oil.
Much of the crude oil refined in the future is
likely to be from the Middle East, South
America or parts of the United States that pro-
duce crude with naturally high sulfur con-
tents.
Depending on its source, crude may con-
tain from 0.1 to 7 percent sulfur by weight.
The removal of some sulfur during refining
has been necessary to meet pollution stand-
ards for sulfur oxides, to prevent sulfur
poisoning of refining catalysts, to inhibit cor-
rosion of pipelines and processing units and
to increase the octane raising -
potential of
lead gasoline additives.
Through a number of processes, sulfur com-
pounds are converted to hydrogen sulfide
and mercaptans (other sulfur compounds).
About 50 tons of hydrogen sulfide (HS) are
extracted from 20,000 barrels of high sulfur
crude oil in processing. (33)
A description of its effects upon health
is provided by Stellman and Daum in their
book, Work Is Dangerous to your Health:
" At concentrations above 700 ppm, the body
cannot cope with the excess gas, which
reaches the brain and causes breathing to
12 stop. Suffocation occurs in a matter of min-
utes unless the victim is removed and given
artificial respiration. Long - term exposure to
low levels may cause chronic lung disease. "
(34)
When mingling at cracking units with car-
bon monoxide, another chemical which de-
prives the body of oxygen, the combined ef-
fect can be especially dangerous. When not
converted to elemental sulfur, H.S is disposed
of through burning at the flare. This releases
another dangerous pollutant, sulfur dioxide.
Major disasters have occurred as a result
of HS exposure. Ray Davidson of the Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers Union reports
one incident as follows: " In April, 1968, an
accident in the American Oil Company re-
finery at Texas City, Texas, resulted in three
deaths and fourteen injuries directly attrib-
utable to hydrogen sulfide. C. L. Lester, 28,
and C. L. Wenning, 23, were sent to make a
repair on a piece of refining equipment. It
was supposedly clear of all fluids and gases,
but somewhere along the line an error was
made HS in large volume was in the vessel.
The two men unbolted a flange and the gas
flogged out. They collapsed on a working
platform twelve or fourteen feet from the
" In our analytical lab alone
we've had one case of blood
cancer, the man passed away.
A man in another section had
cancer of the bladder; it's been
removed. We have two men
whose blood vessels have been
eaten away due to the
chemicals, and one has plastic
tubes for arteries and veins in
one side of his body. "
A Refinery Worker,
Texaco Refinery.
January, 1973
BP.
a
- by
= CO
SES
,
ground. Later appraisals were that they died
instantly, but fellow workers who did not
know this instinctively rushed to the rescue.
One after another they approached the acci-
dent scene and collapsed of hydrogen sulfide
asphyxiation. " (35)
More Sulfur, More Problems
Many American refineries were not built
to process crude containing over 1 percent
sulfur. The metallurgy of crude distillation
units built to handle sweet (low in sulfur)
crudes cannot withstand the corrosive action
of high sulfur -
, or sour crudes, which eat away
at pipelines, valves and vessels. A 1973 in-
dustry survey found that in 47 of 200 refiner-
ies, crude distillation units could not resist
corrosion from high sulfur -
crudes. (36)
With any relaxation of air pollution -
stand-
ards for sulfur dioxide, many refineries will
process higher - sulfur crudes and will pollute
the community as well as the workplace even
more. In refineries built with special corro-
sion resistant -
metals and extensive sulfur-
removal equipment, so long as there is more
sulfur in the crude, there is still a greater dan-
ger of exposure to HS and SO gases. Addi-
tional maintenance will be required to com-
bat greater corrosion; it is unlikely, however,
that companies will hire the necessary peo-
ple to do this work. Furthermore, even the sul-
fur removal -
units installed for pollution con-
trol have their dangers. If poorly maintained,
they will be a major source of additional H.S
gas.
The Economics of Maintenance
Because of industry negligence in investi-
gating probable cancer producing -
health haz-
ards, it has not been conclusively established
that such dangers exist from catalytic crack-
ing. When it comes to unsafe working condi-
tions caused by poor equipment maintenance,
however, the record is a convincing and un-
equivocal indictment of the oil industry's dis-
regard for workers'physical well being -
.
The lack of necessary maintenance and the
delays involved in the little maintenance done
means that refineries, with few exceptions,
are in bad condition. Workers complain that
they literally live in benzene, a hydrocarbon
that causes blood disease, probably includ-
ing leukemia. This is due to poor maintenance
of catalytic reforming units, the refinery proc-
ess that produces benzene for blending into
high octane -
gasoline. Thousands of pounds
per day of different hydrocarbons such as
benzene leak from the average refinery. (38)
Although refineries have become increas-
ingly automated during the last quarter of a
century, the ability of refineries to produce
gasoline and other products remains depend-
ent on human labor. Workers must replace
leaking pump packings or sulfur corroded -
pipelines, clean out the lead sludge from gas-
oline storage tanks, soak up oil spills and rig
scaffolds high against the great vessels of
cat crackers. A Public Health Service study
of refinery air pollution emissions says that
" improved housekeeping " is "... often the
only practical control method for some [pol- 13
lution] sources, such as pipeline valves, pump
seals, and sampling operations. " (39) And a
National Petroleum Council report suggests
that " Processing leakage...... is best controlled
by good housekeeping to detect and repair
leaking flanges, valves, and stem packing
and shaft seals. " (40) With explosive materi-
als under high pressure and at extreme tem-
peratures, refineries require an adequate
number of skilled workers capable of care-
fully operating and diligently maintaining the
complicated processing units. Yet, manage-
ment has not allowed workers to operate re-
fineries safely.
The reason maintenance is ignored is not
hard to discern - it is expensive. Hydrocarbon
News reports that maintenance comes to 15
percent of the total costs of refining. (41) Re-
cent maintenance costs for Continental Oil's
five US refineries have come to 13.7 percent
of operating and overhead expenses. (42)
Donald Hepburn, a refinery maintenance
manager with Caltex, says that " Direct main-
tenance repair costs account for 30 to 35 per-
cent of the controllable [emphasis added] re-
finery expenses. " (43) Any way you measure
it, maintenance costs money. While the oil
companies increased the amount of oil re-
fined by 240 percent between the years 1945
and 1971, maintenance material and labor ex-
penditures have decreased by almost 10 cents
per barrel of oil from 1946 to 1969. (44) In-
plant pollution controls have not been added
and working conditions have, therefore, wor-
sened. How this affects health can be appre-
ciated from an examination of the day day - to -
problems workers face at the refineries.
Turnarounds
Refinery managements have reduced the
frequency and length of turnarounds, the pe-
riod when a unit is completely shut down for
cleaning and repair. According to J. F. Hilton
of Standard of California: " In recent years
the run lengths of petroleum processing
plants have increased dramatically. Not too
long ago, a standard turnaround for plants
was only one year. Many plants were not
able to run that long. Now two or three years
is not unusual, and we look forward to con-
tinuous plant runs of even longer than this. "
(45)
For many units, four years of uninterrupted
operation has become an aim, if not a reality.
At Gulf Oil's Philadelphia refinery, for exam-
14 ple, two crude distillation units were once
shut down annually; now they are slated to
run for three years, although both are over
20
years old. (46)
Eugene Peer, formerly with Exxon, now a
refining specialist with the Federal Energy
Office, has stated that " the tendency now is
to run a unit until it practically takes itself
off line. " (48) Old units in particular are run
without maintenance until they fall apart.
Management accepts the risks of sudden fail-
ure, instead of shutting units down for pre-
ventive maintenance; shutdowns are costly.
To turnaround a large crude distillation unit
for a week, which also shuts down units
" downstream, " may result in losses of over
a million dollars. Standard of California re-
ported a few years ago, before oil prices rose
dramatically, that the normal shutdown of
one 80,000 bpd (barrels - per - day) catalytic
cracker might cost $ 1.25 million in expenses
and lost profits. (49)
Industry claims that additives that reduce
pipeline corrosion, better onstream inspection
techniques and stronger pipelines safely al-
low longer run lengths and minimize hazard-
out start - up and shutdown periods. However
true in theory, workers in many refineries are
unable to inspect thoroughly the thousands
of miles of pipeline for corrosion. A Mobil
Oil official says, " the general condition of a
process unit can be established during a ma-
jor overhaul when thorough inspection of all
equipment is made. Unfortunately, such ex-
tensive inspection is costly. Thorough exam-
ination of equipment can now be supple-
mented by'onstream'inspection, although
these facilities are limited by accessibility
and are, therefore, limited in their applica-
tion. " (50)
Clearly they were limited, for example, at
Shell Oil's Pasadena, Texas plant in 1968,
when a corroded pipeline the thickness of a
beer can, carrying sulfuric acid and propy-
lene, exploded, killing two men and causing
serious injury to two others. (51) At the Dela-
ware City, Delaware refinery of the Getty Oil
Company a pipeline rupture in February,
1972 almost destroyed an entire coker. (52)
Fortunately, no one was injured. Both inci-
dents suggest that pipeline monitoring was
inadequate and / or that units were left on-
stream for too long.
In past years, many processing unit fail-
ures or repair difficulties would have brought
an immediate shutdown by management. To-
day, workers are ordered to " get it while it's
running. " like fixing your car as it travels
down the highway. A member of the Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers Union
(OCAW) describes the results of this policy at
Texaco's Westville, New Jersey refinery: " Sev-
eral years ago, a man was severely burned
on a job that was supposed to be done while
the unit was down, and they [management]
said,'We'll get it while it's running.'The
union had warned them about this and told
them not to weld on units when they were
running; we'd never done that in the past.
... The company insisted on doing this; right
across the bargaining table they said,'We're
going to weld on units.'One week after they
made that statement the welder struck an arc
and burned this man from his toes up to his
waist. He spent most of one year in the hos-
pital with his legs all burned up. Six other
men also suffered burns. " (54)
Preventive Maintenance
In addition to minimizing the number and
length of maintenance turnarounds, reducing
preventive and daily maintenance is another
opportunity for cutting costs while maintain-
ing profits. For one refinery manager, " To
achieve a peak of efficiency for a scheduled
maintenance scheme.... it is necessary to re-
duce inspections and scheduled repairs to a
minimum compatible with preventing break-
downs. " What this means, in the words of one
Sun Oil worker, is that " Safety comes first-
as long as it doesn't interfere with produc-
tion. " At one refinery, in regard to mainte-
nance work, " A backlog of about three to six
weeks for the whole of the labor force is con-
sidered to be ideal. " (55) At the Phillip's Pe-
troleum refinery in Bartlesville, Oklahoma,
management considers a six- to eight week -
delay to be appropriate. (56)
Refinery workers know that maintenance
cannot always wait for days, not to mention
weeks or months, without resultant dangers.
A leaking pump emitting a few pounds of
hydrocarbon vapor daily may not be an ur-
gent concern to management because the
cost of the wasted oil is less than the cost of
shutting down the pump to replace or repair
it. To those who work around leaking pumps,
however, such conditions are a hazard that
should qualify as a job for emergency main-
tenance.
At Texaco's Westville, New Jersey refinery
a few years ago a pipeline on a unit froze and
cracked. A pipefitter repaired the line and
" The total reduction [of refinery
employees] since 1959 is 3650
or over 36 percent. At today's
labor rates, that represents a
savings of $ 37,000,000 per year,
and is equivalent to the
average net profit of sales of
almost $ 500,000,000. "
Shell Oil Company internal memo.
June 1, 1966
wrote a work order for an insulator to cover
it. The company sat on the work order re-
quest. Some days later the line froze again.
This time a valve blew out and sent aroma-
tics into a nearby heater, resulting in an ex-
plosion that destroyed 40 percent of the unit
and caused a foreman to suffer a fatal heart
attack. (57)
Management would prefer to redefine most
cases of emergency maintenance as jobs that
can wait. Donald Hepburn, a maintenance
manager with Caltex, describes a project
aimed at improving maintenance efficiency:
" I forget the exact numbers, but... the first
day I think there were 37 jobs and by the
time we left two weeks later, it had come
down to three on the last day, because some-
body was defining for the people in the field
what was an emergency job. This had a very
dramatic effect, and the operations people
in that refinery began to re educate -
their peo-
ple. They did it effectively and it kept down
the number of emergencies. " (58)
Caltex's desire to end " unnecessary " emer-
gencies holds true for all oil companies. An
official of American Oil's Whiting, Indiana
refinery says that, " We too prefer not to do
emergency jobs, because of their inefficiency
and make every effort to question the operat-
ing pople to ascertain if it really is an emer-
gency. " (59) According to an executive of
Total Leonard, an independent refining com-
pany, " We make every effort to question the
necessity of doing the work. Emergency work
is inefficient. " (60)
Adequate maintenance means the employ-
ment of adequate numbers of maintenance
personnel. During the OCAW strike against 15
Shell Oil in 1973, the company equated the
union's demands for more maintenance work-
ers with featherbedding. The charge will not
stand up to scrutiny, but an examination of
its implications will tell us a great deal about
the economics of plant maintenance and by
inference the politics of occupational health
and safety.
Fewer People, More Money
Since the end of World War II, manage-
ment, through layoffs and attrition, has con-
tinuously reduced the number of workers em-
ployed in US oil refineries. In 1947, there were
146,000 US refinery workers; by 1972, but 89, -
000, a 39 percent reduction over 25 years. (61)
This workforce reduction cannot be explained
by the reduction in the number of refineries
(from 399 in 1947 to 247 in 1972) because total
refinery capacity during this period has in-
creased by almost 150 percent.
An informal survey of ten refineries by the
National Petroleum Council found that work-
force size had been reduced by an average of
46 percent between 1956 and 1966. (63) Ray
Davidson, Assistant to the President of OCAW,
describes the effects of this trend on a butane
recovery unit at ARCO's Houston, Texas re-
finery: " During a slack period, part of the
unit was shut down and the workforce was
cut from six down to two. When business re-
covered, the company not only reopened the
entire unit but also added another section
to it and -- kept the workforce at two men.
Then an entire new unit... was built adja-
cent to the butane recovery unit. This new
equipment with a separate function was tied
in with the butane recovery unit... and one
man was added to the workforce. Now three
men operate facilities at least as twice as
large and complex as those formerly oper-
ated by six men. " (64)
Similar situations prevail at other refiner-
ies. M. L. Fahrmann, an official of Standard
of California, spoke for the entire industry
when he said, " The concept of operating on
the basis of a planned shortage of manpower
has frequently been used by maintenance
management, and with good results. " As he
described his company's practice, " Preven-
tive maintenance, tank repairs and other rou-
tine maintenance work are advanced or de-
ferred. " In summary. " Higher management is
generally interested in maintaining the com-
pany workforce below that required by the
16 basic work load [emphasis added]. " (66)
One way to accomplish this is to assign
more tasks to each worker. For example, gas
testing is key to safety in a refinery. The gas
tester is responsible for checking for explo-
sive and hazardous concentrations of ben-
zene, hydrogen sulfide, carbon monoxide
and other substances. Without notice from
the gas tester that vapor levels are safe, en-
try is not allowed into vessels and tanks, and
welding or use of electricity is prohibited. At
Sun's Marcus Hook refinery there have in the
past been 21 gas testers. The company has
eliminated 12 of them and plans to train unit
operators to do the monitoring. (67) While in
B.P
theory this is beneficial for individual work-
ers who acquire additional skills, in practice
it means that workers lose the benefits of the
specialization of the gas tester, who is familiar
with this work on a daily basis. Other com-
panies also plan to eliminate the gas tester's
jobs.
Cross crafting -
carries this practice one step
further. As the workforce is reduced, there
are fewer people to maintain greater capac-
ity. For maximum efficiency, the companies
attempt to abolish craft lines. Instead of being
a welder, a pipe fitter or a rigger, a worker
would be a mechanic with several skills. And
unit operators are expected, though not al-
ways trained, to do maintenance work. Since
training is inadequate, all kinds of workers
have difficulty working safely. In an industry
replete with dangers that make a virtue of
specialization, cross crafting -
can be a men-
ace.
At turnaround time there are not enough
people available to shut down and clean the
units fast enough for management. Outside
contractors are hired to do part or all of this
work. The contracting crews, which rush from
one job to another, are not aware of refinery
hazards, especially those associated with un-
familiar equipment.
Some refinery workers believe that the
companies hire outside contractors to take
advantage of a provision of federal safety
and health law that makes the contracting
employer, not the oil company, responsible
for death or injury on the job.
Contractors'employees are rarely aware
of the meaning of gas warning alarms;
sometimes the alarms may sound without the
slightest notice being taken by the contract-
ing crews. Other unsafe contracting crew
practices include not having standbys, work-
ing without permits and entering vessels
without gas testing.
Labor force reductions also result in fewer
people being around when a unit fails. Ac-
cording to Hugh Robinson, Managing En-
gineer for the Oil Insurance Association:
" It is quite astonishing to walk through many
large refineries today and note just how few
personnel are at the units. When the process
is running under proper conditions there is no
doubt that this represents a cost savings.
When abnormal conditions arise, then we be-
lieve there is more than what used to be con-
sidered the normal potential for loss. Not only
are there fewer operators available for cor-
rection of the abnormal conditions, but should
a piece of machinery or a control or piping
fail, there are fewer personnel immediately
available for fire fighting activities. " (68)
The industry claims that workforce cut-
backs have been made possible through auto-
mation. However, O. L. Hurley of American
Oil says, " With less equipment, fewer people
have been required. Much of the change,
however, has been the result of the need to re-
duce processing costs in any way possible to
meet an ever tightening squeeze on profits
[emphasis added]. " (69) Robinson of OIA,
while more aware than Hurley of the danger-
ous results of such decisions, offers a similar
explanation for both manpower and mainte-
nance reductions: " You might ask why we
[the Oil Insurance Association] are complain-
ing about... losses at this time? Haven't we
always been plagued by such events? True,
but seemingly not on the same scale nor in
areas where so much value was exposed to
the resulting effects of the breakdown. Neither
have we had the strain on available mainte-
nance personnel in the past that we seem to
have today. Much too often, we believe, main-
tenance programs are being neglected in the
overall push for economy. " (70)
From 1946 through 1972, about 30 of the
largest oil companies (virtually the entire
American oil industry) together made more
than $ 94 billion in profit. (71) Such a profit
was based in part on the sacrifices working
people were forced to make of their safety
and health. Oil workers are increasingly re-
fusing to make such sacrifices.
The Shell Strike and Beyond
Oil workers, like coal miners, have not been
complacent about unsafe working conditions.
Workers have often organized unions be-
cause of them. According to Harvey O'Con-
nor, in his History of the Oil Workers Union
-CIO: " Unionism found its origin in the fires
and accidents that swept through the Shell
plant, built [in Pasadena, Texas] in 1928-29.
A safety and welfare committee demanded
protection. They asked for gas masks, asbes-
tos hoods, goggles, remote controls and air
control values to make refining processes
safer. They wanted two men on dangerous
jobs to help one another in case of accident.
They asked for a new ambulance to replace
a broken down vehicle, nurses on all shifts,
and jobs for widows of men killed on the job. "
(72)
Bitter strikes against workforce reductions
were waged at the Gulf, American and Shell
Oil refineries in the late 1950's and early
1960's. The strike at Shell's Pasadena refin-
ery lasted just under a year, but was ulti-
mately lost due to the company's ability to
maintain production using supervisory and
technical personnel.
Today there is a rising level of worker
consciousness about the nature of job haz-
ards and the importance of controlling the
productive processes that cause them. During
collective bargaining many unions are in-
creasingly less willing to accept deteriorat-
ing working conditions in return for higher
wages. As one Shell worker put it, " We rec-
17
ognize that all the things we have gained in
the way of wages and everything else, if you
die getting them, they are not going to do you
any good. " (73)
In 1973 4,000 Shell Oil workers represented
by the OCAW called their first national strike
over occupational health and safety issues.
After five months the strike was settled. While
the giant oil company made some conces-
sions and countless numbers of other union
workers and environmental and consumer
groups learned about the realities of oil in-
dustry work, the final settlement did not satis-
fy the Shell workers. Shell Oil retained final
decision - making power over health and safe-
ty policy.
OCAW's original industry - wide bargaining
program in 1973-74 comprised a sweeping set
of demands, including establishment of joint
management - labor safety and health com-
mittees, safety and health monitoring and em-
ployees'training programs and access to in-
formation indicating the chemical identity of
all substances used in the refinery. In addi-
tion, OCAW demanded all available morbid-
ity and mortality data, appropriate free med-
ical tests for workers and the right of work-
ers to refuse work endangering their health.
OCAW also proposed a special fund for
health and safety research and education, to
be financed by management contribution
and maintained jointly by OCAW and the in-
dustry. (74) OCAW's demands were relatively
extensive, given that little previous national
oil bargaining had occurred over health and
safety issues.
While many oil companies agreed to at
least some of the demands not (including the
fund proposal or the right to refuse work
clause), Shell refused to bargain seriously for
months and was the only company struck.
(75) Finally Shell agreed to establish com-
mittees and to provide OCAW with morbidity
and mortality data.
The Shell strike experience shows that vic-
tory will not be easy. While refinery tech-
nology does not offer much in the way of
health protection to workers, it does make the
oil companies less vulnerable to traditional
union strike strategies.
Years ago, when oil workers walked out,
refineries shut down completely. But in 1959,
when OCAW struck American Oil at Texas
City, Texas, management began operating
refineries using supervisory, technical and
18 clerical personnel. (76) Today, due to further
automation, it is even harder for a strike to
affect production. Furthermore, the industry's
vast economic resources make it a formidable
adversary. Of the 25 largest industrial cor-
porations ranked by 1972 sales, nine are pe-
troleum companies. (77) The major compa-
nies control the sources of oil, its production,
transportation, refining and marketing over
much of the nonsocialist world. Twenty cor-
porations control 86 percent of US refining
capacity. (78) And the major oil companies
are now really energy companies, controll-
ing supplies of coal (which can be converted
to gasoline), oil bearing -
shale and uranium.
So when a strike reduces output, the struck
corporation may speed up production at its
refineries elsewhere in the world or may se-
cure supplies of finished products from friend-
ly " competitors. " Or it may provide coal from
its mines to power plants that have switched
from burning oil.
The political impact of the industry is enor-
mous. Striking oil workers face not only com-
pany resistance but generally unsympathe-
In the case of one employee,
Henderson, he was ordered to
light off a furnace.... He
objected it was unsafe. Two
other operators told the fore-
man it was not mechanically
safe.... The foreman called the
Department Manager at home
and then told Henderson that
they had decided it was safe
to light off.... Mr. Henderson
struck the torch and was
burned to death.
Affidavit of T. Jacobs
NLRB Case 7565 # 20 - CA -
Filed, 1970.
tic public officials and government agencies
as well. The industry has been successful in
convincing many administrators and legisla-
tors, both Republican and Democratic, that
" What's good for oil is good for America. "
Despite the hurdles to be overcome, the five-
month Shell strike renewed an intensified
struggle between those who direct production
and those who actually produce our goods
and services. The strike was significant be-
cause OCAW was willing to step into an
arena of work policy and plant control where
unions have often feared to tread. As health
conditions continue to deteriorate in the oil
industry, strikes and other worker actions
over health and safety issues are inevitable.
Given the limited effectiveness of the strike
weapon, oil workers will have to develop
new strategies and tactics in order to win
better working conditions and to resist the
further deterioration of the refinery workplace
planned by management. Oil workers,
through the leadership of the OCAW, are in-
creasingly aware of the nature of refinery
hazards and of the need to struggle to end
them. This struggle, to be really successful
necessarily involves workers eventually tak-
ing control over the nature of technological
change, operating rates, maintenance levels
and the size of the workforce in refineries.
Genuine workers'control of refineries would
place safety and health, not profits, first on
the agenda. Such priorities would likely prove
incompatible with the continued existence of
capitalism.
-Rick Engler. (Rick Engler has been a staff
member of the Committee to Support the Shell
Strike and has worked with the Oil, Chemi-
cal and Atomic Workers Union on a number
of projects. This article is excerpted from a
larger study designed for oil workers on the
political economy of refinery occupational
safety and health.)
References
1. George Gibbs and Evelyn H. Knowlton, The Resurgent
Years 1911-1927, A History of Standard Oil of New Jer-
sey (New York: Harper, 1966), p. 142.
2. Paul Giddens, Standard Oil Company (Indiana): Oil
Pioneers of the Middle West (New York: Appleton-
Century Croft, 1955), p. 28.
3. H. N. Blakeslee, " A Portrait in Safety, " Industrial
Safety Survey, VII (December October -
, 1941), 3-4.
4. Henrietta Larson and Kenneth W. Porter, History
of Humble Oil and Refining Company (New York:
Harper and Brothers, 1959), p. 211.
5. Calculated from American Petroleum Institute, Petro-
leum Facts and Figures (1971) and US Bureau of
Mines data.
6. Statisical Absract of the United States.
9.
7. US Bureau of Mines.
8. Ibid.
9. John L. Enos, Petroleum Progress and Profits: A History
op.f 1P8r7.o
cess Innovation Cambridge (
: MIT Press, 1962),
10. Ibid., p. 196.
11. Ibid., p. 196.
12. 12. Ibid., p. 204.
13. John W. Frey and H. Chandler Ide, A History of the
Petroleum Administration for War, 1941-1945 (Wash-
ington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1946), pp.
193, 213.
14. G. I. Davis, " Coal and Petroleum Products as Causes
of Chronic Irritation and Cancer, " Journal of the
American Medical Association, XII (May 30, 1914),
pp. 1716-1720.
15. The American Cancer Society, Proceedings of the
First National Cancer Conference, and Federal Se-
curity Agency, The National Cancer Institute of the
United States Public Health Service (1949), p. 245.
16. K. Sagirua, W. E. Smith and D. A. Sunderland, " Car-
cinogenic Action of Certain Catalytically Cracked Oils
with High Boiling Points, Cancer Research, IX (Oc-
tober, 1949), p. 631.
17. J. P. Holt, N. V. Hendricks, R. E. Eckardt, C. L. Stanton
and R. C. Page, " Symposium on a Cancer Control
Program for High Boiling Catalytically Cracked Oil, "
Cancer Research, IX (October, 1949), p. 31.
18. Ibid., pp. 32-37.
19. Kettering Laboratory, Condensed Summary of the Ob-
jectives and Findings of an Experimental Program for
the Appraisal of the Potential Carcinogenic Charac-
teristics of Certain Petroleum Products (1960), p. 1.
20. Kettering Laboratory, Final Report, API Research Proj-
ect MC 1. Investigation of the Potential Hazards of
Cancer of the Skin Associated with the Refining of
Petroleum (1960), p. 7.
21. Ibid., p. 9.
22. Kettering Laboratory, Report of Progress in the Epi-
demiological Studies, Appraisal of the Potential Car-
cinogenic Properties of American Petroleum Products
(1955).
23. Ibid.
24. " Report of the Subcommittee on Carcinogenicity CarcinogeniCcaricitnoyge
nicity to
API Medical Advisory Committee, " October 31, 1955,
p. 4., in History of the Subcommittee on Carcinogen-
icity, 1955-1957.
25. Kettering Laboratory, Condensed Summary
.
.
cit., p. 6.
26. Kettering Laboraatory, Report of Progress
..
., op.
"
op.
cit., p. 4.
27. Kettering Laboratory, An Epidemiological Study of
Cancer Among Employees in the American Petroleum
Industry (1958), p. 1-19.
28. cKite.t, tpe.r 5i.n
g Laboratory, Condensed Summary
..
., op.
29. K. Sagirua, op. cit., p.31.
30. Enos, op. cit., p. 219.
31. Letter from E. O. Mattocks, Department of Technical
Services, American Petroleum Institute to Members of
the Medical and Health Committee of the Board of
Directors, March 6, 1961.
32. Herman R. Mench, John T. Casagrande and Brian E.
Henderson, " Industrial Air Pollution: Possible Effect
on Lung Cancer, " Science, January 18, 1974, pp. 210-
212.
33. Sidney Miner, Litton Systems, Inc., Preliminary Air
Pollution Survey of Hydrogen Sulfide, A Literature
Review (Washington, D.C.; US Department of Health,
Education and Welfare, Public Health Service, 1969),
p. 23.
34. Jeanne Stellman and Susan Daum, Work Is Dangerous
to Your Health (New York: Vintage, 1973), p. 161.
35. Ray Davidson. Peril on the Job (Washington, D.C.:
Public Affairs Press, 1970). p. 32.
36. National Petroleum Refiners Association, United States
Domestic Petroleum Refining Industry's Capability to
Process Sweet / Sour Crude Oil (1973).
37. " Explosion and Fire Experience in the Hydrocarbon
Processing Industry. " speech to Combustion Institute.
Central States Section, April 8, 1970, p. 6.
38. Atmospheric Emissions from Petroleum Refineries - A
Guide for Measurement and Control (Cincinnati, Ohio:
Public Health Service, 1960), p. 31.
39. Atmospheric Emissions
...
op. cit.
40. National Petroleum Council, Factors Affecting U.S.
Petroleum Refining, Impact of New Technology (1973),
P. 7.
41. " Hydrocarbon Processing Industry Has Made Steady
Progress in Better Maintenance Practices, " Hydrocar-
bon News, November, 1971, p. 13.
42. Ibid.
43. Donald F. Hepburn, " Management of the Total Main-
tenance Function, " Proceedings, National Petroleum
Refiners Association Refinery Maintenance Conference,
January 17-19, 1973, p. 2.
44. National Petroleum Council, op. cit., pp. 63, 71.
45. J. R. Hilton, " Reliable Mechanical Equipment Keeps
Plants Onstream, " Proceedings, American Petroleum
Institute. Division of Refining, 1966, p. 39.
46. Personal interview with Gulf officials, August, 1973.
47. Personal interview, July, 1973.
48. Personal interview, July, 1973.
49. " Chevron Reports on Cat Cracker Rims, " Oil and Gas
Journal, November 9, 1970, pp. 57-61.
19
50. G. R. Deacon, " Some Aspects of Productivity in Re-
finery Operations, " The Manufacturing Function in
the Oil Industry, 1964 Summer Meeting of the Institute
of Petroleum, p. 22.
51. Davidson, op. cit., p. 91.
52. Getty Oil Company, 44th Annual Report, 1972, p. 18.
53. Oil Insurance Association, Fired Heaters (Chicago:
OIA Publication 501, 1971), p. 29.
54. Personal interview, February, 1973.
55. Deacon, op. cit., p. 26.
56. National Petroleum Refiners Association, Proceedings,
1972 Question and Answer Session on Refinery Main-
tenance, p. 39.
57. Personal interview, May, 1974.
58. National Petroleum Refiners Association, Proceedings,
1972 Question and Answer..,. op. cit., p. 37.
59. National Petroleum Refiners Association. Proceedings,
1973 Refinery Maintenance Conference, p. 22.
60. National Petroleum Refiners Association, Proceedings,
1973 Refinery Maintenance..., op. cit., p. 22.
61. Calculation from Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employ-
ment and Earnings Statistics.
62. Calculation from American Petroleum Institute, Pe-
troleum Facts and Figures (1971), p. 135.
63. National Petroleum Council, Impact of New Technol-
ogy on the U.S. Petroleum Industry, 1946-1965 (1967),
p. 305.
64. Davidson, op. cit., p. 104.
65. Personal interview, July, 1973.
66. M. L. Fahrmann, " Maintenance's Function and Re-
sponsibility to Management, American Petroleum In-
stitute, Division of Refining, Proceedings, 31st Midyear
Meeting, Session on Refinery Maintenance, May 9,
1966, Preprint No. 23-66, pp. 1-2.
67. Personal interview, April, 1974.
68. " Past Decade Loss Trend Showed Steady Improve-
ment- Short Term Experience Indicates Danger
Ahead. " American Petroleum Institute, Division of Re-
fining, Proceedings, 32nd Midyear Meeting, Session
on Operating Practices, May 16, 1967, p. 4.
69. O. L. Hurley, " Effects of Changing Trends on Main-
tenance Organization and Requirements, " American
Petroleum Institute, Division of Refining, Proceedings,
31st Midyear Meeting, op. cit., p. 1.
70. " Continuing Underwriting Problems in the Oil and
Petrochemical Industries,'paper presented at the Al-
berta Risk and Insurance Management Society Meet-
ing, April 3, 1969.
71. Compiled from Chase Manhattan Bank, Financial
Analyses of a Group of Petroleum Companies, 1946
through 1972.
72. Harvey O'Conner, History of the Oil Workers Inter-
national - CIO (Denver: Oil Workers International
Union, 1950), p. 293.
73. Barry Weisberg, Our Lives Are At Stake, Shell Strike
1973 (United Front Press, 1973), p. 4.
74. Research Department, Oil, Chemical and Atomic
Workers, OCAW National Oil Bargaining Program
1973-1974 (1972), p. 47.
75. Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers. To Eliminate In-
dustrial Health Hazards (1973).
76. Milden J. Fox, Jr., " The Impact of Work Assignments
on Collective Bargaining in the Petroleum Refining In-
dustry on the Texas Gulf Coast " (unpublished Ph.D.
dissertation, Texas M A & University, 1969), p. 80.
77. " Fortune 500, " Fortune Magazine, May, 1973.
78. Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, US Sen-
ate Committee on Government Operations, " Prelimin-
ary Federal Trade Commission Staff Report on Its
Investigation of the Petroleum Industry, " Investiga-
tion of the Petroleum Industry (1973), p. 18.
Asbestos
(Continued from page 6)
20
=
All of this sounds impressive until one ex-
amines the IHF report itself. (33) Among nu-
merous errors in method was one central,
scientifically inexcusable flaw - the investi-
gators, Daniel Braun and T. David Truan,
virtually ignored the 20 year -
time lag be-
tween exposure to an agent causing lung
cancer and the first visible signs of disease
(the so called -
latent period). They studied
a relatively young group of workers, two-
thirds of whom were between 20 and 44
years of age, well under the expected age
for lung cancer. Indeed only 30 percent of
the workers had been employed for 20 or
more years, the estimated latent period for
lung cancer. With so many young people in
the study, too young to have the disease
although they might well be destined to de-
velop it, Braun and Truan of course did not
find a statistically significant increase in
lung cancer among the miners. As became
obvious later, they had drowned out a clear
danger in a noisy background of misleading
data.
Braun and Truan were obviously aware of
the latent period for cancer, since they cited
in their own paper a number of works that
specifically discussed the phenomenon and
estimated its duration for lung cancer. (33)
For example, Braun and Truan cite US Pub-
lic Health Report No. 26 by W. C. Heuper,
head of the Environmental Cancer Section
of the National Cancer Institute, which esti-
mates a 20 year -
latent period for lung can-
cer. (34) In another cited paper, Heuper spe-
cifically reported an 18 year -
latent period
for lung cancer among asbestos workers.
(35)
The practice of looking at a workforce.
with limited asbestos exposure is not an iso-
lated error in a particular experiment; it is a
Prostitution Pays
The careers of those who have conducted
major industry sponsored -
studies have pros-
pered, despite the fact that their findings
have consistently been contradicted by inde-
pendent studies.
A. J. Lanza, who directed the Metropolitan
Life study on asbestosis in 1935, rose from
Assistant Medical Director at Met Life to be-
come Chairman of the Institute of Industrial
Medicine at New York University Medical
School. Until his death in the early 1960's he
wrote textbooks on lung disease and main-
tained his liaison with industry as a con-
sultant and writer for the Industrial Hygiene
Foundation. (19)
Arthur Vorwald, chief author of the 1938
Saranac study on lung cancer, carried out
hallmark of epidemiological studies funded
by the asbestos industry. It allows the study
to look credible, while avoiding the feared
result. This was true in the 1935 Metropolitan
Life study on asbestosis, which was why the
scientists there did not find asbestosis in its
advanced, most critical stage. Even in the
1970's researchers funded by industry con-
tinue to conduct studies on young workers,
despite scores of experiments by non indus- -
try scientists showing that the various as-
bestos diseases take anywhere from 10 to 30
year to develop. The culprit clearly was not
scientific ignorance, but economic inter- self -
est that - of industry and of the scientists who
do its bidding.
THE LID BLOWS
By 1960, medical research on asbestos
was at a watershed. By then a total of 63
papers on the subject had been published in
the US and Canada and Great Britain. The
52 papers not sponsored by industry, mostly
case histories and reviews of case histories
by hospital and medical school staff, indicted
asbestos as a cause of asbestosis and lung
cancer. The 11 papers sponsored by the as-
bestos industry presented polar opposite
conclusions. They denied that asbestos
caused lung cancer and minimized the seri-
ousness of asbestosis. The difference was
dramatic and obviously dependent on the
further studies for industry and in 1946 be-
came director of the Saranac Laboratory.
Later he was a faculty member in industrial
medicine at Wayne State University in
Detroit.
Daniel Braun, chief author of the 1958 In-
dustrial Hygiene Foundation study on lung
cancer, also didn't suffer for his affiliation
with the study, although his paper was pub-
licly criticized by other scientists and later
contradicted by many other studies. Braun is
now President of IHF and Chief Medical Di-
rector for US Steel, one of this country's
largest corporations.
J. C. McDonald, director of the 1971 McGill
study on asbestos miners, continues to con-
duct industry sponsored -
studies and is now
Chairman of the Department of Epidemiology
and Public Health at the McGill Medical
School.
doctor's perspective, whether treating the
victim of disease or serving as agent for its
perpetrator.
In the early 1960's the research picture
changed dramatically as a result of three
separate studies. In 1960 a new malady was
added to the lexicon of asbestos diseases:
mesothelioma, a rare and invariably fatal
cancer of the lining of the chest or abdomi-
nal cavity. At that time a South African doc-
tor found an unusually high incidence of
mesothelioma among asbestos workers and
their families, as well as those living near
asbestos mines. (36)
In 1963 a study of lung smears from 500
consecutive autopsies on urban dwellers in
Cape Town, South Africa showed that the
lungs of 26 percent had asbestos bodies, the
characteristic bodies originally found in the
lungs of workers with asbestosis. (37) Both
studies received extensive publicity and
raised the specter of asbestos as a modern
environmental hazard affecting all citizens.
To top this off, in the early 1960's Dr. Irv-
ing Selikoff and his associates at Mt. Sinai
Medical Center in New York broke indus-
try's hegemony over medical and personnel
information by using the welfare and retire-
ment records of the asbestos insulators '
union as the basis for conducting an epi-
demiological study. Now for the first time in
the US, scientists not beholden to industry
conducted large - scale definitive studies on
groups of asbestos workers. Beginning in
1964 the investigators reported an unusually
high incidence of lung cancer and mesothe-
lioma among asbestos insulation workers,
with time lags of 20 and 30 years, respec-
tively, between exposure and disease. 38-41 (
)
By focusing on workers with 20 or more
years of exposure to asbestos, these studies
highlighted its hazards. Together with the
South African studies they made the " magic
mineral " front page - news throughout the
world.
Industry Fights Back
The asbestos industry was in trouble and
they knew it. The slow pace of research
studies in the past would no longer suffice
to keep the lid on what had become a steam-
ing cauldron of unfavorable publicity. Now
asbestos companies decided to pour money
into research. Johns Manville -
, giant of the
asbestos industry, for example, spent $ 8.5
million on research and development in 21
1972, a large fraction of which went to out-
side medical research centers. (42) In con-
trast the National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health (NIOSH), the federal gov-
ernment's main research agency in the field,
spent a mere $ 260,000 on a grand total of
three outside asbestos research grants that
year. (43)
As a result, an industry that had only
managed to generate 11 research papers on
asbestos in the three decades before 1960
has come up with 33 in little more than a
decade since then. The recent studies are
just as interested self -
as ever. Industry has
stopped denying that asbestos causes lung
cancer, mesothelioma and asbestosis (al-
though it has not publicly admitted it,
either). But research proposals that industry
thought would minimize the problem or shift
the blame have been given unstinting sup-
port.
Minimizing the Problem
A major industry effort was a massive
epidemiological study published in 1971 by
J. Corbett McDonald and his associates at
the Department of Epidemiology and Public
Health at McGill University in Montreal.
This was funded through a grant from the
Institute of Occupational and Environmental
Health of the Quebec Asbestos Mining Asso-
ciation. (44) The subjects were miners in the
two largest asbestos mines in Quebec.
Over 11,000 miners were traced, those
who were born between 1891 and 1920 and
who had worked in the mines for at least
one month sometime before November 1,
1966. Of these, about 2,500 had died before
1966. The cause of death on each death cer-
tificate was recorded.
Like the earlier IHF study on asbestos
miners, this one looks quite impressive until
it is examined carefully. Then we find as
before that the workforce studied has had
relatively limited exposure, that the long la-
tent period for cancer is virtually ignored
and that many other serious methodological
errors were made.
Consider the duration of exposure of the
workforce. The data presented by McDonald
and associates shows that many of the
miners worked in the mines for only a short
time and then left. One third -
of the miners in
the study had worked less than a year in the
mines, two thirds -
had worked less than 10
22 years. (44) (In contrast, almost all workers
examined in Selikoff's studies had at least
20 years of exposure. (38-41)) Since most
workers in the McGill study had limited ex-
posure to asbestos, it is not surprising that
their mortality was not much different from
that of the general population. McDonald
went even further: " The findings suggest
that our cohort of workers in the chrysotile
mining industry had a lower mortality than
the population of Quebec of the same age. "
(44) (Chrysotile is the name of the type of
asbestos fiber mined in Quebec.)
To check whether miners with heavy ex-
posures had a higher mortality rate than
those with lesser exposures, the McGill
group compared mortality rates among
groups of miners with different levels of ex-
posure. In so doing, they acted as if the
latent period for cancer had gone out of
existence, thereby thoroughly befouling the
comparison. For example, a worker with a
particular exposure who had worked be-
tween 1910 and 1915 was put in the same
category as one who had received an equal
exposure while working from 1960 to 1965.
Yet the first person might have developed
asbestos disease, while the second couldn't
possibly have done so, since not enough
time had elapsed since first exposure. Never-
theless, the data presented by McDonald
showed the lung cancer death rate for those
most exposed to dust to be five times greater
than those least exposed.
Other members of McDonald's department
at McGill have also published articles mini-
mizing the hazards of asbestos. Philip Enter-
line and M.A. Kendrick published an epidem-
iological study on workers at an asbestos fac-
tory which, by their own admission, looked at
a young group of men who had worked at
the factory for a relatively short time. (45)
The authors further excluded from their
study those over age 65, who had of course
retired and left the plant, thereby eliminating
those most likely to show the ill effects of
working with asbestos. As a result, they in-
correctly concluded that low dust concen-
trations are not dangerous. When Enterline
moved from McGill to the University of
Pittsburgh, he was rewarded for his earlier
work with a coveted prize from Johns - Man-
ville, access to the company's records to
conduct an epidemiological study of its re-
tired employees. The study was also fi-
nanced by Johns Manville -
, according to its
History of Johns Manville -
Research, al-
though Enterline does not acknowledge such
support in his paper. (46) No surprise, this
study also came up roses reporting -
only a
small increase in death rate (15 percent) for
retired employees.
Credibility Gap
In contrast to the above studies, those not
supported by industry consistently found
asbestos to be a serious health hazard. While
Braun and Truan, McDonald and Enterline
all found no increase in mortality rate due to
asbestos or only small increases up to 20
percent, studies not financed by industry
reported an increase in mortality rate among
asbestos workers of from 200 percent to 9,000
percent above that of the general popula-
tion. Non industry -
studies in addition to
those by Selikoff and associates were con-
ducted by Doll, (32) Mancuso and Coulter
(47) and Dunn and Weir. (48) (All of these
except Selikoff's were carried out by staff
members of government agencies.
After at least a dozen epidemiological
studies, the gap between industry and non-
industry results persists. And as long as in-
dustry can find researchers whose work for
them looks scientifically credible, the gap
will continue. The name of the game is not
truth, of course, but delay. It has been so
for over 50 years. Delay for industry means
time to make more money, and since the
research of the early 1960's time to diversify
and seek alternatives to asbestos.
Shifting the Blame
Another way to gain time is to try to shift
blame. So pro industry -
scientists have re-
cently concocted one after another theory
purporting to prove that asbestos workers
and their families were not dying from as-
bestos but from some impurity, some con-
taminant or some unusual type of asbestos.
It's Trace Metals
One of the early theories was that trace
metals were contaminating asbestos and
causing the diseases attributed to asbestos.
In 1967 Paul Gross of IHF reported in an
industry sponsored -
study that rats breathing
asbestos fibers artificially contaminated with
trace metals developed lung cancer, while
those breathing unadulterated asbestos
didn't. (49) The theory seemed implausible
to many scientists, who pointed out that the
two groups of rats were exposed under sig-
nificantly different conditions (namely, the
metal enriched -
asbestos dust was finer and
penetrated the lungs more than the regular
dust). Nevertheless, Gross persisted and his
theory picked up support, especially among
scientists close to industry. Lewis Cralley, a
pro industry -
scientists at NIOSH and an as-
sociate of Gross on several scientific papers,
championed this theory. Along with several
other NIOSH scientists, Cralley conducted at
least four studies on this hypothesis in
NIOSH's own labs, tying up a substantial
fraction of the very limited resources there.
One of the three outside research grants
made by NIOSH in 1972 also tested this
theory, with Cralley as its director. (50)
Meanwhile Gross continued his experiments
with industry support until six years later he
performed a carefully conceived experiment
that finally laid his own theory to rest. (51)
No, It's Special Fibers
Another theory not yet laid to rest is that
certain types of asbestos fiber are danger-
ous, while others are safe. Ninety - five per-
cent of the asbestos used in the US and
Canada is of one type, chrysotile. Since the
Bag
HAVE TEST TUBES
WILL TRAVEL
23
bad fiber -
theory has its origins in industry-
sponsored research, it comes as no surprise
that fiber types other than chrysotile have
been blamed for asbestos disease. For ex-
ample, McDonald and associates invoked
this theory to explain the difference between
their results and Selikoff's. The discrepancy
could be explained more simply of course:
McDonald and associates carried out a poor
study and their results are invalid.
Nevertheless, since there are five different
types of asbestos fiber and each has differ-
ent physical and chemical properties, it has
been difficult either to prove or disprove the
theory. Because the theory if true would
have important practical consequences,
many scientists have felt obliged to investi-
gate. Today it is discussed and debated in
virtually all asbestos papers, industry and
non industry -
. Recently Selikoff and Ham-
mond conducted a major study on amosite
fiber largely to address this problem and
found no difference in mortality between
amosite and chrysotile workers. (53) The dis-
cussion and experiments go on and on.
No, It's Storage Bags
Probably the ultimate in fishing around for
something else to blame was the theory pro-
pounded by Gibbs of McGill and funded by
the Quebec Asbestos Mining Association,
that the polyethylene bags in which asbestos
is stored are contaminating the asbestos.
(54) This idea died of its own weight, without
need of others to shoot it down. Nevertheless,
it lasted long enough to be funded by indus-
try, printed in the literature and delivered as
a paper at the 1969 Johannesburg Interna-
tional Conference on Pneumonoconiosis.
The single proposal from industry sources
that appears to have some plausibility is that
the so called -
asbestos bodies commonly
found in the lungs of city dwellers may in
fact be caused by fibers and particles in the
air other than asbestos. Gross at IHF has in-
duced " asbestos bodies " in rat lungs with
other minerals and fibers (55), and debate
still rages on whether most of the bodies in
humans are or are not due to asbestos.
While industry has lost most of these bat-
tles, the eventual outcome of each is less im-
portant than the fact that each salvo has tied
up scientific resources, defined research is-
sues and bought time. In the case of almost
every industry proposal, some non industry -
24 scientists have had to conduct experiments
in rebuttal, using up some of the meager re-
sources in the process.
STILL BUYING TIME
Following passage of the federal Occupa-
tional Safety and Health Act in 1971, major
attention was focused on the new national
standard for asbestos. Following an emer-
gency appeal by many labor unions, a hear-
ing was held in 1972. George Wright, Johns-
Manville's chief science advisor, was able at
the hearings to call on five studies backing
up J M's - contention that the standard of five
asbestos fibers per cubic centimeter should
be maintained, not lowered. Of the five
studies, four had been funded by the asbes-
tos industry. (For more details, see BULLE-
TIN, March, 1973.)
But most important, industry's studies, de-
spite their faults, helped put a scientific cover
over industry's interests. Industry could not
prevent the asbestos standard from being
lowered to two fibers per cubic centimeter,
but it contributed to a delay in its effective
date for four years until 1976. Thus the asbes-
tos industry won precious time to regain its
initiative in this struggle. For workers too, the
time lost was critical. Dr. Selikoff estimates
that this delay could eventually take as
many as 50,000 lives. (56)
But even when the fiber limit comes down
the battle is not over yet, not by a long shot.
The 1972 NIOSH report on asbestos
bases its two fiber -
recommendation primarily
on the British standard. But the British stand-
ard is based entirely on a single study. (57)
This study turns out to be an epidemiological
study performed at Turner Brothers Asbestos
Company, Great Britain's largest, by the
company medical director! (21) This is the
equivalent of a Johns Manville -
study deter-
mining the US asbestos standard. The flack
that has now developed over the standard
has nothing to do with its British industrial
auspices, however. What has happened is
that Turner Brothers'new medical director
has recently re examined -
the workers at its
Rochdale plant and they show a far greater
incidence of asbestosis than previously ob-
served. (21) This startling discovery was not
made in the industry paper, but is based on
an analysis of the data presented there by
Dr. Selikoff and others. Apparently the com-
pany's medical director didn't realize the im-
plications of his own data - it was presented
Creepy Cralley
Lewis Cralley was a top US government
official in occupational health until his retire-
ment last year, and through his affiliation
with the Industrial Hygiene Foundation
(IHF) was an important link between indus-
try and government research. Starting in
1964 Cralley directed a US Public Health
Service study of health conditions in the as-
bestos industry and suppressed its findings
for six years until they were released by
other NIOSH officials over his objections. Be-
tween 1968 and 1972 he published four
papers with Gross and deTreville at IHF, al-
though during the last two years he was
NIOSH project director for various asbestos
grants, at least one of which was to IHF. As a
specialist in lung disease, he played an im-
portant role at NIOSH in funding and direct-
ing government asbestos research. He re-
cently edited a book on occupational health
with his twin brother, Lester Cralley, Assist-
ant Director of Environmental Health Serv-
ices for Alcoa and board member of IHF.
Upon retirement he was presented with the
US Public Health Service Meritorious Serv-
ice Medal, " in recognition of his research
into developing safe worker exposure levels
to such potential occupational hazards as
uranium, asbestos, silica, beryllium, and dia-
tomaceous earth dust. "
(For a more detailed discussion of Cral-
ley's activities. See Chapter 4 of Expendable
Americans (Viking, 1974) by Paul Brodeur
and the Health / PAC BULLETIN, September,
1972.)
in the article in a complex set of graphs and
tables and furiously denies that he showed
an increase of asbestosis over the earlier ex-
periment. But government and academic
scientists in England and the United States
clearly do not agree, and official reconsider-
ation of the two fiber -
standard is likely to
take place soon.
THE ACADEMIC PAYOFF
While its sponsorship of medical research
has been buying time for the asbestos
industry, it has also been spurring on indi-
vidual scientific careers. Most prominent
among these are Paul Gross of the Industrial
Health Foundation and J.C. McDonald of the
Department of Epidemiology and Public
Health at McGill University Medical School.
The asbestos industry sought and found
these individuals at institutions with which it
had friendly relationships over the years.
IHF had carried out pro industry -
research on
lung diseases for many years, including the
1958 Braun Truan -
study. The Department of
Epidemiology at McGill had assisted Metro-
politan Life in its 1953 asbestosis study and
very probably aided Braun and Truan in
their study of Quebec asbestos miners.
The large influx of money also helped
transform what started out as typical med-
ical research empires into institutional bases
for asbestos industry research. Today Mc-
Donald is Chairman of the McGill Epidemi-
ology Department and Braun is president of
IHF. (Paul Gross is retired.) These centers
now stand as academic havens for pro indus- -
try scientists and help bring other scientists
into the industrial research orbit. From Mc-
Gill during the last decade papers on as-
bestos have poured out that are supportive
of industry interests and in many cases
openly financed by industry.
The studies at IHF during the last decade
have been more closely associated with
three people, Gross, deTreville and Lewis
Cralley. Gross and deTreville were IHF di-
rectors and Cralley was a US government
official in occupational health. Until his re-
tirement last year Cralley was an important
link between industry and government re-
search through his connections with IHF. Be-
tween 1968 and 1972 he published four
papers with Gross and deTreville at IHF,
even while as a government official he
played an important role in funding and di-
recting government asbestos research (see
box above).
A measure of the central role of McGill
and the IHF in industry sponsored -
research
is the fact that these two institutions con-
ducted 25 of the 33 studies supported by the 25
asbestos industry and published since 1960.
What industry hoped to get from this re-
search was perhaps best characterized by
Ivan Sabourin, then attorney for the Quebec
Asbestos Mining Association, quoted by Paul
Brodeur in his book, Expendable Amer-
icans. Sabourin told a 1965 meeting of the As-
bestos Textile Institute that QAMA sought
" alliance with some university, such as
McGill, for example, so that authoritative
background for publicity can be had. " (58)
The asbestos industry may also be devel-
oping a base on the West Coast through the
consulting firm Tabershaw - Cooper Associ-
ates, directed by Irving Tabershaw, former
president of the Industrial Medical Associ-
ation and now editor of its journal, and W.
Clark Cooper, former director of the US Bu-
reau of Occupational Safety and Health and
editor of the 1971 National Academy of
Sciences report on asbestos in the environ-
ment. (59) Both are retired professors of Oc-
cupational Health at Berkeley School of Pub-
lic Health. For years, Cooper and now
Tabershaw - Cooper Associates have been re-
cipients of asbestos industry grants, funded
mostly through the National Insulation Man-
ufacturers'Association. (18) The firm, despite
or perhaps because of its industry connec-
tions, also has held at least one NIOSH con-
tract to write federal standards for a hazard-
ous chemical. (60)
The Scientific Failure
This year is the 50th anniversary of W.E.
Cooke's report in the British Medical Journal
on a worker death due to asbestosis, an
event that marked the rediscovery of asbes-
tosis by the medical profession. (11) Since
then over 200 medical articles on asbestos
have been published in the English lan-
guage and the number of victims of asbes-
tos related -
diseases has increased steadily.
Lung cancer due to asbestos was first re-
ported in 1935. Mesothelioma due to asbestos
was reported in 1960. And the learned scien-
tific debates go on, with industry's mer-
cenary scientists trying first to deny the haz-
ards of asbestos, then to minimize them or
else to shift the blame. Against them, non-
industry scientists have been demonstrating
the hazards of asbestos and trying to clinch
the scientific case against it, but never quite
succeeding against industry's enormous re-
sources.
26
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of lives
have been lost to asbestos - related diseases,
and the end is not in sight. Today the many
hundreds of thousands of people who
worked in shipyards during World War II
are facing an epidemic of cancer caused by
the use then of asbestos insulation. Families
of asbestos production workers are now be-
ing found to develop the same diseases as
their breadwinners in the factories. (61) Two
years ago, Selikoff and associates confirmed
another disease to be caused by asbestos,
gastrointestinal cancer. This is the fourth as-
bestos disease, and if the past is any guide,
others are still to follow.
Looking back at the medical debates that
have raged, it is clear that asbestos research
was only one factor in a much larger social
and economic picture. To the extent that
medical scientists
In the late 1920's and early 1930's, when as-
bestos was already known to cause asbes-
tosis, the industry was still relatively small.
If medical people had not then limited them-
selves to operating within narrow profes-
sional roles and had taken their information
about asbestos to asbestos workers and the
public, the expansion of the asbestos indus-
try might have been nipped in the bud and
thousands of lives might have been saved.
Even today, while some medical scientists
work with labor groups and communicate
their findings to the public, their scientific
papers still narrowly focus on the medical
issues and fail to expose the very real scien-
tific political -
strategies used by companies
against them and on behalf of more pliant
scientists. If this is not done, scientists in
other occupational health fields will not be
able to learn from the lessons of the asbestos
struggle and will end up repeating many of
the errors of the past, sometimes at great
cost to human life.
The vast majority of scientists probably
still wish to keep their labs untouched by the
outside world, narrowly pursuing circum-
scribed scientific questions. But if they refuse
to acknowledge and interact with the worlds
of economics and politics, they may, as in
the case of asbestos, win the battle to dis-
cover truth and lose the war to save human
lives.
-David Kotelchuck Robert (
Phillips, an intern
at Health / PAC this past summer and a med-
ical student at Mt. Sinai Medical School, sur-
veyed much of the medical literature re-
ferred to in this article.)
References
1. New York Times Magazine, May 4, 1969, p. 36.
2. Council for Tobacco Research, Inc., Report of the Coun-
cil for Tobacco Research - USA (New York, 1972).
3. New York Times, December 27, 1972, p. 1.
4. Washington Post, September 5, 1974, p. A2.
5. Wall Street Journal, October 2, 1974, p. 1.
6. H. M. Murray in Charing Cross Hospital Gazette (Lon-
don. 1900).
7. H. M. Murray, Report of the Departmental Committee on
Compensation for Industrial Disease (London: H. M.
Stationery Office, 1907), p. 127.
8. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health,
Occupational Exposure to Asbestos - Criteria for a Rec-
ommended Standard (Washington: US Government Print-
ing Office, 1972), p. III - 4.
9. A. C. Haddow. Proceedings, British Journal of Medicine,
II (1929), p. 204.
10. J. Donnelly, " Pulmonary Asbestosis, " American Journal
of Public Health, XXIII (1933), p. 1275.
11. W. E. Cooke, " Fibrosis of the Lungs Due to the Inhala-
tion of Asbestos Dust, " British Journal of Medicine, II
(1924), p. 147.
12. H. E. Seiler, British Journal of Medicine, II (1928), p. 982.
13. H. E. Seiler and M. D. Gilmour, British Journal of Med-
icine, I (1931), p p. 1112.
14. R. G. Mills, " Pulmonary Asbestosis: Report of a Case, "
15M.i nWn.e sBo.t aS oMpeedri,c i"n eP,u lXmIoInIa r(y1 9A3s0b)e,s tpo.s i4s9:5 .A
Case, " American
Review of Tuberculosis, XXII (1930), p. 571.
16. D. S. Egbert, " Pulmonary Asbestosis, " American Review
of Tuberculosis, XXXII (1935), p. 25.
17. A. J. Lanza et al., " Effects of Inhalation of Asbestos Dust
on the Lungs of Asbestos Workers, " US Public Health Re-
ports, Vol. 50, No. 1 (1935).
Research Department, "
18. Reported in " History of Johns Manville -
manuscript prepared for the 1972 U.S. Labor
hearings on asbestos and distributed by the Asbestos
Information office.
Association of North America, New York
19. A. J. Lanza, Silicosis and Allied Disorders, Industrial
Hygiene Foundation Medical Series No. 12 Pittsburgh (
,
1936).
20. W. R. Goodwin, President of the Johns Manville -
Corpo-
ration, in an address to the Newcomen Society (Decem-
ber 16, 1971).
21. H. C. Lewinsohn, " Medical Surveillance of Asbestos
pW.o r69k.e
rs, " Royal Society of Health Journal, 92 1972 (),
22. Tubercle ,E .X VR .( 1A9.3 3M)e,r epw.e t6h9e.r
, " A Memorandum on Asbestosis, "
23. I. J. Selikoff et al., " Late Effects of Occupational Ex-
posure to Asbestos in U.S. Shipyards in World War II, '
presented at International Symposium on Safety and
Health in Shipbuilding, Helsinki 1971 ().
24. K. M. Lynch and W. A. Smith, " Pulmonary Asbestosis, "
American Journal of Cancer, XXIV (1935), p. 56.
25. H. B. Holleb and A. Angrist, " Bronchiogenic Carcinoma
in Association with Pulmonary Asbestosis,'American
Journal of Pathology, XVIII (1942), p. 123.
26. A. J. Vorwald and J. W. Karr, " Pneumoconiosis and Pul-
monary Carcinoma. " American Journal of Pathology,
XIV (1938), p. 49.
27. L. U. Gardner and D. E. Cummings, " Studies on Exper-
imental Pneumoconiosis, " Journal of Industrial Hygiene,
XIII (1931), p. 65.
28. L. U. Gardner, " Chrysotile Asbestos as an Indicator of
Subtile [sic] Differences in Animal Tissue, " American
Review of Tuberculosis, 45 (1941), p. 762.
29. A. J. Vorwald et al., " Experimental Studies of Asbes-
tosis, " A.M.A. Archives of Industrial Hygiene and Occu-
paionat Medicine, III (1951), p. 1.
30. E. R. A. Merewether, Annual Report of the Chief In-
s19p4e7c)t.
or of Factories (London: H. M. Stationery Office.
31. S. R. Gloyne, " Pneumoconiosis, " Lancet, 1 (1951), p. 810.
32. R. Doll. " Mortality from Lung Cancer in Asbestos
Workers, " British Journal of Industrial Medicine, XII
33. (D1.9 55D)., Cp.. B8r1.a
un and T. D. Truan, " An Epidemiological
Study of Lung Cancer in Asbestos Miners. " Archives of
34. IWn.d uWs.t rCi.a lH uHeepaelrt,h ,Q uXeVsItI i(n1t9o5 8E)n,v ipr.o n6m3e4n.t
al Causes of Can-
cer of the Lung, US Public Health Monograph No. 36
(1955).
35. W. C. Hueper, " Environmental Causes of Cancer of the
Lung Other Than Tobacco Smoke. " Diseases of the Chest,
XXX (1956), p. 141.
36. J. C. Wagner et al., " Diffuse Pleural Mesothelioma and
Asbestos Exposure, " British Journal of Industrial Med-
icine, XVII (1960), p. 260.
37. J. G. Thomson et al., " Asbestos as a Modern Urban Haz-
ard, " South African Medical Journal, 37 (1963), p. 77.
38. I. J. Selikoff et al., " Asbestos Exposure and Neoplasia, "
Journal of the American Medical Association, 188 (1964),
p. 22.
39. I. J. Selikoff et al., " Relation Between Exposure to As-
bestos and Mesothelioma. " New England Journal of Med-
icine, 272 (1965), p. 560.
40. I. J. Selikoff et al., " The Occurrence of Asbestosis among
Insulation Workers in the United States,'Annals of the
N.Y. Academy of Science, 132 (1965), p. 139.
41. Reviewed in I. J. Selikoff et al., Cancer of Insulation
Workers in the United States. Lyons Conference on As-
bestos (1972).
42. Johns Manville -
Corporation, Report to the US Securities
and
Commission, Form 10 - K (Washington,
1973), Exchange p. 6.
43. NIOSH Contract and Research Agreements (Washing.
ton: US Public Health Service, September, 1972), p. I vi -.
44. J. C. McDonald et al., " Mortality in the Chrysotile As-
bestos Mines and Mills of Quebec, " Archives of Environ-
mental Health, XXII (1971), p. 677.
45. P. Enterline and M. A. Kendrick, " Asbestos Dust Ex-
at Various Levels and Mortality, " Archives of
Environmental Environmental Health, XV (1967), p. 181.
46. P. Enterline et al., " Respiratory Cancer in Relation
to Occupational Exposure Among Retired Asbestos
Workers'British Journal of Industrial Medicine, XXX
(1973), p. 162.
47. T. F. Mancuso and E. J. Coulter, " The Cohort Approach
with Special Reference to an Asbestos Company, " Ar-
48. Jocf.h
iEv.e Sse voefr aEln vDuinrno namnedn Jt.a lW eHiera,l "t hP,r oVsIp ec(t1i9v6e3 )S,t udpy. o2f1 0M.or
tality
Occupational Groups, " Archives of Environ-
50. Smeeen traelf eHreeanlcteh ,4 3X,V IpI. 129.
68 (), p. 71.
49. P. Gross et al., " Experimental Experimental Asbestosis, " Archives of
Environmental Health, XV (1967), p. 343.
51. P. Gross and R. A. Harley, Jr"
., " Asbestos - Induced Intra-
thoracic Tissue Reactions,'Archives of Pathology, 96
(1973), p. 245.
52. See reference 44, p. 685.
53. I. J. Selikoff et al., " Carcinogenicity of Amosite As-
bestos, " Archives of Environmental Health, XXV (1972).
54. G. W. Gibbs, " Some Problems Associated with the Stor-
age of Asbestos in Polyethylene Bags, " American In-
dustrial Hygiene Association Journal, XXX (1969), p. 458.
55. P. Gross et al., " Pulmonary Response to Fibrous Dusts
of Diverse Compositions. " American Industrial Hygiene
Association Journal, XXXI (1970), p. 125.
56. New York Times Magazine, January 21, 1973, p. 64.
57. G. Berry, Hygiene Standards - Theory and Application
in Biological Effects of Asbestos, World Health Organiza-
tion, I.A.R.C. Paper No. 8 (1973).
58. Reported in Paul Brodeur, Expendable Americans (New
York: Viking, 1974). p. 135.
59. Committee on Biologic Effects of Atmospheric Pollutants,
W. C. Cooper, Chairperson, Asbestos: The Need for and
Feasibility of Air Pollution Controls (Washington: Na-
60. tSieoen arlef eArceandceem y4 3o,f pS.c i6e2n.c
es, 1971).
61. New York Times, September 19, 1974, p. 1.
Occupational Health Packet
While everyone talks about preventive health on the shopfloor,
someone is actually doing something about it. This packet in-
cludes four Bulletins which provide for the first time an analysis
of how industry and government have dealt with the problem;
case studies of occupational diseases - of white lung disease
and of the most terrifying occupational health plague - asbes-
tosis; and a profile of the miners'struggle with black lung dis-
ease. (September, 1971, March, 1973, September, 1972, November-
December, 1974.) $ 2.00.
27
to quash the nascent PSRO.
=
Vital Signs
SWIMMING IN BEDS
While nearly everyone
agrees that there is a growing
excess of hospital beds, hos-
pital construction is neverthe-
less undergoing a boom un-
paralleled in the rest of the
economy. US Department of
Commerce statistics show
hospital construction for the
The housestaff group must
show 25 percent support
among county physicians to
receive conditional recogni-
tion by HEW. Then upon noti-
fication, if 10 percent of the
county's physicians object, a
vote must be taken. The group
must then receive majority
support, or the whole process
starts over again.
Some physicians have
threatened to strike, several
quarter ending June 30 up 9
percent over last year, while
private construction has drop-
ped 3 percent in the same pe-
riod. Many attribute this to
the ending of wage and price
controls for health care in
hospital officials have voted
to boycott PSRO efforts and
several hospital directors and
department chiefs have writ-
ten their staffs urging them
not to " wander into his
[Greene's] clutches. " The bat-
April of this year.
tle will be an uphill one for
PSRO: TO BE OR NOT TO BE
This year's raging debate
in the AMA has been whether
doctors are more damned if
they embrace the creation of
PSRO's (Professional Stand-
ards Review Organizations)
than if they don't. (For discus-
sion of PSRO's, see BULLETIN,
July August /
, 1974.) In Los An-
geles County, it would seem
that the latter is the case.
While the LA County Med-
ical Association studiously ig-
nored the advent of PSRO's,
presumably hoping they
would thereby go away, the
Interns and Residents Associ-
ation of Los Angeles County
Medical Center, headed by
militant housestaffer Rex
the housestaff group, but
meanwhile interest in PSRO's
has never run so high in Los
Angeles County.
At the same time the Senate
Appropriations Committee has
moved to allay fears that
other troublesome PSRO's will
come into being. On Septem-
ber 11 it voted to slash $ 28
million from the $ 58 million
PSRO budget for Fiscal Year
1975. If the measure passes
Congress, officials claim that
no new PSRO contracts will
be awarded. Currently some
40 to 60 new PSRO areas want
to come into the program and
others are waiting until more
money becomes available.
KENNEDY MANPOWER
Greene, was the sole appli-
cant to form a PSRO. With no
BILL DEFANGED
Senator Edward Kennedy
contenders, the federal gov-
suffered a resounding defeat
ernment was obliged to give
on a health manpower meas-
the group a PSRO planning
ure containing some sweeping
grant.
precedents for the medical
When the medical commu-
world. Kennedy's bill would
nity became aware of this de-
have authorized some $ 5.1 bil-
velopment, it was up in arms.
Threatened with " students run-
lion for health manpower
training over the next five
ning the teachers, " physicians
years while requiring (1)
28
are mounting a full scale -
fight
every entering medical stu-
dent to serve two years in
areas of medical shortage (on
pain of loss of license for fail-
ure to follow through); (2)
regulation by HEW of the
number, type and location of
all internships and residen-
cies; and (3) establishment of
national standards of licen-
sure and relicensure of physi-
cians every six years. The
measure, passed by the Senate
Labor and Public Welfare
Committee, was defeated 57-34
on the Senate floor.
A much watered - down sub-
stitute sponsored by Glenn
Beall (R.-Md.) was subsequent-
ly passed. The measure would
authorize $ 454 million in cap-
itation grants to medical
schools over the next three
years while requiring that 25
percent of a school's students
agree to serve in areas of
medical need after graduation.
It would also limit the number
of foreign medical graduates
admitted to internships and
residencies (eventually not to
exceed 25 percent); expand the
National Health Service Corps
and authorize $ 165 million in
scholarships over the next
three years; and require that
schools administer three - year
residency training programs
in primary care and family
practice. The measure now
goes to the House.
SOUTHERN EXPOSURE
A recent study by the South-
ern Regional Council has
found the health status of 11
Southern states lagging be-
hind the rest of the country on
almost every significant index.
Infant mortality was lowest in
Arkansas - 19.6 infant deaths
per 1,000 live births (still
higher than the national av-
erage of 19.2 -and)
highest in
Mississippi - 29.1 infant deaths.
Nonwhite infant mortality was
universally higher than white,
ranging from 25.7 in Arkansas
to 39.7 in Mississippi.
The ratio of primary care
physicians to population falls
far below the national aver-
age of 1 781:. Mississippi and
Alabama had 1 1,860:, South
Carolina had 1 1,829:
and Ar-
kansas had 1 1,821:. Four
Southern states rank among
the five in the nation having
the fewest primary care phy-
sicians per population.
The report attributed the
low health status of the South
largely to the related prob-
lems of poverty, housing, sani-
tation, environment and nu-
trition.
A TOUCH OF CLASS
Some of the frustration and
prejudice encountered by for-
eign housestaff in the US was
highlighted by former Presi-
dent Nixon in his recent hos-
pitalization for phlebitis. Upon
meeting Dr. Robert Toumajian,
a third year -
surgical resident
of Armenian descent who was
treating him, Nixon suggested,
" If you want to be rich, you
should go into the Armenian
restaurant business. " Touma-
jian commented later that the
remark " bugged me a little, "
and he thought Nixon " was
condescending. " " The stereo-
type of an Armenian is that
you have to be cleaning rugs
or running a restaurant, " '
Toumajian said.
DO IT YOURSELF
Trouble with transportation
to and from medical facilities?
A patient at Roosevelt Hos-
pital, New York City's busiest
midtown hospital, devised his
own solution. As hospital au-
thorities reconstruct the event,
the youth, admitted earlier in
the evening for being drunk
and disorderly, apparently
found the hospital ambulance
(complete with keys in the ig-
nition) parked in the hospital
parking lot, and drove home.
While the hospital used a
back - up ambulance, the police
found the missing vehicle two
hours later parked in a resi-
dential neighborhood in Brook-
lyn. A new twist in self help -.
O.R. WORKERS BEWARE
Operating room workers are
subject to higher than expect-
ed rates of cancer, spontane-
ous abortion and birth defects
among their children, appar-
ently as a result of breathing
anesthetic gases, a startling
study done by the National
Institute of Occupational
Safety and Health and the
American Society of Anesthe-
siologists has revealed. A sur-
vey of 29,000 doctors, nurses,
anesthetists and technicians
revealed far higher rates of
cancer and miscarriages than
normally expected among
women, increased rates of
liver and kidney disease
among both men and women,
and increased rates of birth
defects among children born
to both men and women op-
erating - room workers. The two
groups that sponsored the
study are now seeking to es-
tablish criteria for safe oper-
ating - room conditions.
NEW WOMEN'S
HEALTH PUBLICATION
The Fall issue of Health
Right, a publication of the
Women's Health Forum, has
made its appearance. The first
issue leads off with an article
entitled " Women's Health
Movement: Where Are We
Now? " Other articles deal
with attempts at limiting wom-
en's rights to abortion and an
interview with a nurse about
the role of consumer participa-
tion from a worker's perspec-
tive.
Subscriptions to Health
Right are $ 5 a year. The ad-
dress is: 175 Fifth Avenue,
Room 1319, New York City,
N.Y. 10010.
29
PHANTOM SALES,
REAL PROFITS
approximately $ 1.4 million a
year, yielding Touro an esti-
and, until recently, State At-
torney General Louis Lefko-
The nursing - home industry
is coming in for some sharp
scrutiny in New York State, in
part due to a recent series of
hard hitting -
exposs in the
New York Times. Aside from
patient neglect, often verging
on the scandalous, the Times
mated $ 100,000 a year in in-
come. He then applied to Med-
icaid for an increase in reim-
bursement rates. Medicaid
surprisingly turned down the
request, stating that it did not
see why it should contribute
to Mr. Hollander's favorite
witz, who just resigned to in-
vestigate you guessed it the -
sale and leaseback of nursing
homes in the state. Mean-
while, seeking horizons be-
yond the nursing - home busi-
ness, Touro is applying to the
State for a charter to establish
has focused on schemes de-
charity.
a medical school.
signed to enhance nursing-
While the sale of the Hol-
CHARITY EXCLUDES POOR
home owners and operators
by bilking New York State's
Medicaid program. Medicaid
provides 90 percent of nurs-
ing home income in the state
and paid $ 560 million for nurs-
ing home care last year.
lander homes was presented
in his application to the State
as a fait accompli, there has
now come to light an earlier
agreement between Hollander
and Touro College that would
automatically cancel the sale
Voluntary hospitals staved
off a potential threat to their
mode of operating financially
when the federal Court of Ap-
peals for the DC Circuit on
October 9 reversed a ruling of
the DC District Court that had
These schemes include pay-
roll padding, nepotism, kick-
backs from suppliers, falsifica-
tion of costs and withholding
if the State refused to grant
higher reimbursement rates.
When charged with being less
than forthright about the sale,
required as a condition of tax-
exempt status that private,
nonprofit hospitals provide
free or below - cost services to
of services paid for by Med-
icaid from patients. Chief
among them, however, is sale
and leaseback - the practice of
a lawyer for Touro College
denied " the impression that
Touro College was engaged in
some unethical scheme, which
persons unable to pay (see
BULLETIN, May June /, 1974.)
The Court of Appeals up-
held an Internal Revenue
selling a nursing home to ones-
self or one's associates and
it was not. " He continued, " I
need hardly point out that
Service interpretation of the
word " charitable " in the tax
then leasing it back at a high-
such operations have become
law that found the promotion
er rate. The operator, thus
having incurred additional ex-
almost classical procedure
and are a major source of in-
of health per se to be a char-
itable purpose and that per-
penses in rent, mortgage pay-
come to many of our leading
mitted hospitals to qualify for
ments and / or depreciation,
colleges.'"
tax exempt -
status as char-
can then apply for and gen-
Dr. Bernard Lander, Presi-
itable institutions if they main-
erally count on getting an in-
creased reimbursement from
dent of Touro College, is no
newcomer to the nursing home
tained an emergency room
open to all and provided hos-
Medicaid, which pays on a
business. Before coming to
pital care to all those able to
cost plus - basis. This practice
no doubt accounts for the fact
that over half (200) of New
Touro, he was the former Di-
rector of Medic - Home Enter-
prises, a large out state - of -
pay, either directly or through
third party - reimbursement. The
court took the IRS at its word
York State's 378 private nurs-
nursing home chain known to
that it requires hospitals under
ing homes applied for changes
have links to at least 38 other
this ruling to accept Medicaid
of ownership last year alone.
nursing homes in the City.
patients, a notion that Med-
The practice of sale and
And if Touro's trustees were
icaid recipients in many parts
leaseback is exemplified in
newcomers, they are no doubt
of the country would dispute.
the case of Eugene Hollander,
former President of the Metro-
being quickly initiated. They
include former US Representa-
The court also ignored the fact
that an estimated 20 million
politan New York Nursing
Home Association, who at-
tive Emanuel Celler, whose
law firm represented Touro in
Americans have no coverage,
public or private, for the cost
tempted to sell his four nurs-
the nursing home transaction,
of hospital care. The Amer-
ing homes to Touro College, a
New York City Mayor Abra-
ican Hospital Association,
small, newly established liber-
al arts college in Manhattan,
for $ 29 million. Mr. Hollander
30
then leased back the homes at
ham Beame, Senator Jacob
Javits, State Controller Arthur
Levitt, State Assembly minor-
ity leader Stanley Steingut
which had stayed clear of the
suit during its earlier stages,
participated as friend of the
court in the appeal.
A
Peer Review
SECOND THOUGHTS
FROM THE SOUTH
Dear Health / PAC:
The rush in which we wrote
our article [Southern "
Empire:
Hot Handed -
Duke, " BULLETIN,
July August /, 1974] allowed
several errors to creep in, as
well as several omissions. Be-
cause of this we would appre-
ciate your printing this letter.
First, Tim McGloin, the ar-
ticle's co author -, was incor-
rectly identified as a member
of the New American Move-
ment (NAM). He is not. He is a
member of the Citizens Con-
cerned About Durham Health
Care (CC), a community or-
ganization that has been work-
ing for several years to im-
prove Durham's health system.
Two significant omissions
concerned us. First, the final
form of the article did not con-
centrate enough on the actual
organizing work going on. In-
sufficient credit went to the
CC for the role they played in
organizing the early hearings
before the Health Planning
Council for Central North Car-
olina. No attention at all was
given to the unionization cam-
paign underway at Duke. This
union effort is mobilizing
many workers at Duke and
the unions are playing a ma-
jor role in organizing opposi-
tion to the expansion plans.
Another important omission
is the fact that NAM is an op-
enly socialist group and that
we are central to the organiz-
ing effort. This is no accident.
Our socialist perspective pro-
vides us with the essential
tools in understanding the ac-
tual realities of class and
power in Durham. The situa-
tion here, where private inter-
ests are clearly manipulating
the public interest and the
public purse for private gain,
exposes the myth of the " pri-
vate sector. " Duke's money
comes from its workers, its pa-
tients, and the taxpayers. Its
policies directly influence the
public's welfare. Because of a
legalism, Duke claims that it
is private and that no one can
tell it what to do. As socialists
we are saying what people al-
ready know: Duke is a public,
i.e., social, institution in the
profoundest sense of the word
and that it must meet the peo-
ple's needs. Because people
already feel this way they re-
spond to us. By strongly argu-
ing the issue on the basis of
class (i.e., a rich man corpo- /
ration vs. workers approach)
we have gained a real follow-
ing and excited the interest of
many people at Duke and in
Durham. Because we talk
about organization and polit-
ical power we are taken
seriously.
We have not found the
much feared -
reaction of peo-
ple turning off at the mere
mention of the word " social-
ism. " Some are put off, but
many others are curious about
what we mean. It is easy to
point to the issue we are all
working on as an example of
how society is divided into un-
equal classes. And it is quite
obvious in this case that those
not in the ruling class must
organize to win their rights.
A surprising number of folks
agree that they are socialist
too.
Our strategy, in this city
where the largest industry is
health care, is to bring to-
gether a wide variety of
groups into a multi racial -
working class coalition. This
is the only way we will be
able to beat Duke.
An important question
haunting many people across 31
the country is whether to sur-
face now as socialists, that is,
whether the working class is
" ready. " It appears, at least
in Durham, N.C., that the work-
ing class is just as ready as
the Left. We'll keep you
posted.
-Paul Bermanzohn for the
Durham Health Collective
-NAM
Health / PAC replies:
We know that attribution is
a sensitive matter in many ar-
ticles, so we are sorry that
Tim McGloin was misidenti-
fied. We must point out, how-
ever, that we signed the ar-
ticle according to the authors '
written instructions.
The two omissions cited in
the letter were not accidental.
Although some information on
organizing in Durham was in-
cluded in the authors'first
draft, we did not feel the facts
about Citizens Concerned and
unionization presented in that
draft were adequate or well
substantiated. Furthermore,
they were not germane to the
major theme of the article,
Durham's medical empire and
its relationship to local and
national elites. This omission
was made in consultation with
the authors.
The fact that the New Amer-
ican Movement is an " openly
socialist group " was omitted
because we did not feel the
authors were concrete about
how this nomenclature affects
their organizing - either help-
ing or impeding it.
We think the letter raises
important issues which are
worthy of discussion in their
own right and could not be ad-
dressed adequately in the
Durham article.
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32