Popular epidemiology and toxic waste contamination: lay and professional ways of knowing
- Brown University, Providence, RI (United States)
Building on a detailed study of the Woburn, Massachusetts, childhood leukemia cluster, this paper examines lay and professional ways of knowing about environmental health risks. Of particular interest are differences between lay and professional groups' definitions of data quality, methods of analysis, traditionally accepted levels of measurement and statistical significance, and relations between scientific method and public policy. This paper conceptualizes the hazard-detection and solution-seeking activities of Love Canal, Woburn, and other communities as popular epidemiology: the process by which lay persons gather data and direct and marshal the knowledge and resources of experts in order to understand the epidemiology of disease, treat existing and prevent future disease, and remove the responsible environmental contaminants. Based on different needs, goals, and methods, laypeople and professionals have conflicting perspectives on how to investigate and interpret environmental health data.
- OSTI ID:
- 6913158
- Journal Information:
- Journal of Health and Social Behavior; (United States), Vol. 33:3; ISSN 0022-1465
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
TOXIC MATERIALS
HEALTH HAZARDS
ATTITUDES
CHEMICAL INDUSTRY
ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURE
EPIDEMIOLOGY
LEGAL ASPECTS
MAN
MASSACHUSETTS
RISK ASSESSMENT
WASTES
ANIMALS
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
HAZARDS
INDUSTRY
MAMMALS
MATERIALS
PRIMATES
VERTEBRATES
560300* - Chemicals Metabolism & Toxicology