Environmentally Induced Illnesses: Ethics, Risk Assessment and Human Rights

Front Cover
McFarland, 2012 M07 24 - 304 pages
Readers drawn to Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, Laurie Garrett's The Coming Plague, or Theo Colburn's Our Stolen Future will appreciate this work by Thomas Kerns as well. The growing epidemics of chemically induced illnesses from long-term, low-dose exposure to toxicants in both developed and developing nations are being studied by serious researchers. Questions are being raised as to how societies will deal with these new problems. Kerns's book is the first to directly address the ethical dimension of managing environmental health and ubiquitous toxicants (such as solvents, pesticides, and artificial fragrances). The work includes recent medical literature on chronic health effects from exposure to toxicants and the social costs of these disorders; relevant historic and human rights documents; recommendations for public policy and legislation; and primary obstacles faced by public health advocates. College instructors and students, victims of chemical sensitivity disorders, public health workers, scientists, and policymakers who are interested in the challenge of these emerging epidemics will find Kerns's text highly informative.

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Contents

Acknowledgments
1
Health Eects Overview
25
Two Principles
91
Nonconsensual Exposure
140
Summary
147
Three Modest Proposals
154
25
162
50
169
Four Brick Walls
209
Conclusion
241
Appendix IVDraft Declaration of Principles
258
Twenty Most Common Chemicals Found
278
Index
293
Copyright

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About the author (2012)

College professor Thomas Kerns teaches medical ethics and philosophy at North Seattle Community College in Seattle, Washington.

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