Book Summary of Phantom Risk: Scientific Inference and the Law by K. Foster, D. Bernstein, P. Huber, (eds)
Citation:
Phantom Risk: Scientific Inference and the Law, K. Foster, D. Bernstein, P. Huber, (eds), (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1993), 457 pp.
This Book Summary written by: Conflict Research Consortium Staff
Phantom Risk will be of interest to those who seek to understand the
nature of scientific risk assessment, and relation of risk to legal
liability. This work is divided into seventeen chapters, and a final
conclusion. In each chapter a scientist addresses an occupational or environmental health issue which has figured prominently in
tort
litigation.
Chapters one and two present overviews of the scientific and legal
perspectives on risk assessment. Chapter one discusses the role of epidemiological
and animal studies in determining hazards and assessing risks. Chapter
two describes the legal approach to questions of risk, discusses the role of the
media and public reaction, describes the financial
incentives involved in tort litigation, and discusses the function of expert
witnesses and the rules of evidence.
Chapters three through six address phantom risks. Phantom risks are "cause-and-effect
relationships whose very existence is unproven and perhaps non-provable." K. Foster considers the possible connection between
weak magnetic
fields and cancer in chapter three, and between video display
terminals and miscarriages in chapter six. J. Mills
examines the risk of birth defects posed by spermicides in
chapter four. In the fifth chapter L. Lasagna and S. Shulman
explore claims that Benedictin (an anti-nausea drug) causes birth
defects. The section concludes with a brief summary of the litigation in these
areas.
Chapters seven through fourteen explore the risks posed by low-level
exposure to substances which are known to be hazardous at high levels of
exposure. B. Ames and L. Swirsky Gold discuss the
misconceptions surrounding environmental pollution and cancer. R. D'Agostino Jr., and
R. Wilson asses the risk posed by low
level asbestos exposure. R. Kimbrough examines the human health
effects of polychlorinated biphenyls. R. Jaeger and A. Weiss
review the literature in toxicology and epidemiology regarding tri-chloroethylene. M. Gough examines the risks posed by
dioxin. G.
Tokuhata discusses the public health consequences of the Three Mile
Island nuclear accident. R. Lapp examines the hazards of low level radiation
exposure from fallout. B. Cohen reviews the case of a filter system failure in
the uranium processing plant in Fernald, Ohio, in 1984. Again,
this section concludes with a brief summary of the litigation in these areas.
Chapters fifteen through seventeen examine the legal issues that arise from
questionable medical theories. M. Romsdahl discusses the theory of
trauma induced cancer. M. Luster, G. Rosenthal, and D.
Germolec examine "multiple chemical sensitivities"
syndrome. R. Cornfield and S. Schlossman critique the court's decision in Elam
v Alcolac, and propose an evidentiary standard for the consideration of immunology
legal claims. A brief summary of the litigation concludes this
section.
The concluding chapter offers specific guidelines to help the legal
system deal with phantom risks.
Phantom Risk offers a careful examination of many current and
controversial hazards, and is designed to be accessible to the "intelligent
lay reader."
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