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Health Physics | 1983

Radiation hormesis, public health, and public policy: a commentary

Richard J. Hickey; Evelyn J. Bowers; Richard C. Clelland

Public policy affecting public health regarding effects of low-level ionizing radiations has been, and is being, determined by effects estimates based on linear or other monotonic extrapolation from high-level radiation dose-response data to presumed ecologically realistic low-level exposure effects. Such predictive, unmeasured estimates are very possibly in serious error; they are incompatible with observed low-level dose-response data that indicate a negative correlation between low-level radiation data and health effects, such as cancer mortality rates. Observed negative correlations with low-level radiation data are to be expected on the basis of evidence supporting the validity of the hormesis phenomenon. Hormesis theory, derived in part from evolutionary biology, asserts that while high levels of exposure to an agent such as ionizing radiation are indeed hazardous, ecologically realistic low levels can be stimulatory and largely beneficial. Stimulation of activities of DNA and other repair mechanisms may be involved. Although evidence of the reality of radiation hormesis has been reported in about 1000 scientific publications over the last century, this effect has been largely unrecognized. Moreover, this widespread non-acceptance of hormesis as a real-world phenomenon is usually but not always present in the case of chemical hormesis; the oversight appears systematic. The ignoring of the hormesis phenomenon seems to constitute a very serious error in modern biomedical science and in preventive medicine. A mathematical model is offered that describes the general shape of certain dose-response functions when radiation hormesis at low-level exposure is taken into consideration along with the well-known detrimental effects of high-level radiation.


Health Physics | 1981

Low level ionizing radiation and human mortality: multi-regional epidemiological studies. A preliminary report.

Richard J. Hickey; Evelyn J. Bowers; Dwight E. Spence; Babette S. Zemel; Anne B. Clelland; Richard C. Clelland

AbstractAnalyses of relationships involving environmental chemicals, background radiation, and mortality rates for diseases of the heart and several cancer categories are presented. Bivariate correlation coefficients between radiation and mortality rate were significantly negative for cancer of the


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1978

Maternal smoking birth weight infant death and the self-selection problem.

Richard J. Hickey; Richard C. Clelland; Evelyn J. Bowers

Several aspects of the relationship between maternal smoking and birth weights of infants are discussed. No satisfactory explanation for Yerushalmys results has been given other than that low birth weight appears to relate more to the smoker than to the smoking. Recent studies by Silverman support this position. The possibility that nicotine may induce a physiologic response that serves to alleviate bioenergetic deficiency in some individuals should not be overlooked. In this view, both smoking and low birth weight are symptoms of deficient maternal bioenergetic systems.


Archives of Environmental Health | 1976

Health Effects of Atmospheric Sulfur Dioxide and Dietary Sulfites: The Fallacy of Typology

Richard J. Hickey; Richard C. Clelland; Evelyn J. Bowers; David E. Boyce

Some animal studies have shown that exposure to low levels of sulfur dioxide and dietary bisulfite is relatively harmless. To the contrary, sulfite oxidase deficiency is known in man, bisulfite is mutagenic for several test organisms, and the atmospheric SO2 level is positively correlated with death rates for several chronic diseases among some human populations. The studies reporting harmlessness for animals may be misleading because of the fallacy of typology.


Archives of Environmental Health | 2013

Health Effects of Atmospheric Sulfur Dioxide and Dietary Sulfites

Richard J. Hickey; Richard C. Clelland; Evelyn J. Bowers; David E. Boyce

Some animal studies have shown that exposure to low levels of sulfur dioxide and dietary bisulfite is relatively harmless. To the contrary, sulfite oxidase deficiency is known in man, bisulfite is mutagenic for several test organisms, and the atmospheric SO2 level is positively correlated with death rates for several chronic diseases among some human populations. The studies reporting harmlessness for animals may be misleading because of the fallacy of typology.


Health Physics | 1984

More comments on radiation hormesis, epidemiology and public health.

Richard J. Hickey; Richard C. Clelland; Evelyn J. Bowers


JAMA | 1974

Coffee, Tobacco, and Cardiovascular Disease: The Self-Selection Problem

Richard J. Hickey; Richard C. Clelland; David E. Boyce; Evelyn J. Bowers


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1981

Associations involving environmental lead

Richard J. Hickey; Richard C. Clelland; Evelyn J. Bowers; Anne B. Clelland


Archives of Environmental Health | 1975

Nitrogen Oxides, Tobacco Smoke, and Chronic Disease

Richard J. Hickey; Richard C. Clelland; David E. Boyce; Evelyn J. Bowers


JAMA | 1974

Smoking, Health, and Confusion

Richard J. Hickey; Richard C. Clelland; David E. Boyce; Evelyn J. Bowers

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Richard J. Hickey

University of Pennsylvania

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Anne B. Clelland

University of Pennsylvania

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