Ness Motley Documents
Meeting with Dr. Cooper, National Heart and Lung Institute
Fields
- Notes
Produced by: TII
Affected Defendants: TII
- Type
- Report
- Characteristic
- author, case, source unknown, marginalia
- Named Person
- Kornegay
- Mills
- Kastenbaum
- Cooper, Theodore
- Gori, Gio
- Rauscher, Frank
- Edwards, C. C.
- Mills
- Original File
- TobDocs1
- Site
- unknown
- Author (Organization)
- The Tobacco Institute
- Case
- unknown
Document Images
October i0, 1973
Meeting with Dr. Cooper, National Heart and Lung Institute
Messrs. Kornegay, Mills and Kastenbaum met this morning with Dr. Theodore
Cooper, Director of the National Heart and Lung Institute. The meeting
lasted for about 45 minutes. Dr. Cooper was joined by Dr. ~io Gori for
the entire meeting.
Mr. Kornegay opened the meeting by expressing the tobacco industry's
interest in maintaining communications with members of all branches of
government. He indicated that we had met recently with Dr. Frank
Rauscher, Director of the NCl, and that we were planning to meet next
week with Dr. C.C. Edwards. The purpose of all of these meetings was
to establish and maintain a dialogue between the tobacco industry and
responsible representatives of the Federal government. Mr. Kornegay
made it clear that our purpose was not to ask for any favors, but rather
to acquaint Dr. Cooper with the industry's interests in the mutual
problems of the industry and the Heart and Lung Institute. He stated
further that the industry was deeply concerned with the irresponsible
public statements which are occasionally made by representatives of
some of the health agencies; that the industry was as much interested
in good research and in the reports of such research as anybody else,
and perhaps more so in the area of tobacco and health.
Mr. Kornegay discussed briefly some of the projects which are being
funded by the industry through the Council for Tobacco Research, and
directly by some of the companies. Among the projects he mentioned

was the work at Harvard University, and its relevance to pulmonary
disease, and some of the research in the area of heart disease
supported by the CTR.
Dr. Cooper responded by saying that when Dr. Gori advised him of our
desire to meet with him, he welcomed the oppor.tunity for such an
exchange of views. He pointed out that the Heart and Lung Institute
had not paid too much attention to tobacco-oriented research until
recently. The current interest in this area of investigation, he said, ...
came about for two reasons:
1--Under the recently passed PL 92--423 , more research money became
available, and members of his advisory board felt that some of it should
be spent in the area of smoking and health.
2--When Lung was combined with the Heart Institute, research efforts in
smoking and health became more relevant, because of the association that
has been indicated between emphysema and bronchitis and smoking.
He then described a large well-designed statistical study of multiple
risk-factors being conducted under the auspices of the NKLI. This
study, involving 12,000 people in 20 locations throughout the country,
is concerned principally with the ~ffect on heart disease of such
factors as blood pressure, cholesterol and smoking habits. He suggested
that we might be interested in this study and that we should probably
follow it.
Dr. Cooper indicated that as a result of the recent interest in tobacco-
oriented research, the Heart and Lung Institute was involved directly

with "Dr. Gori and the Tobacco Working Group. He said that Drs.
Gardner C. McMillan and Claude J.M. Lenfant were his appointed
representatives to the Tobacco Working Group. (McMillan is .Associate
Director for Etiology of Arteriosclerosis and Hypertension, and
Lenfant is Director of the Division of Lung Diseases at the NHLI).
Our impression is that Dr. Cooper was suggestihg that any exchange
of information between us and the NPILI might be handled through these
gentlemen.
Dr. Cooper then expressed some of his personal views concerning the
relative importance of cigarette smoking to heart diseases. He feels
thah patients with heart problems should not indulge in smoking;
that as a physician he recommends that such patients give up smoking
for their own welfare. At the same time, he feels that several other
important aspects of the whole problem of heart disease could be
handled more positively. In particular he mentioned such things as
w~ight reduction and blood pressure monitoring. He even (jokingly)
suggested that the cigarette companies might consider replacing the
Surgeon General's warning with advice to smokers, namely "}{ave you Had
Your Blood Pressure Checked Recently." He was serious however when he
suggested that the cigarette companies consider carrying the "Have You
Had Your Blood Pressure Checked Recently" advertisement on a piggy-back
basis. He indicated that he was going to 9 ~t in touch with other
industries, such as General Motors, regarding this matter.
With respect to heart disease, Dr. Cooper said that though everybody
will agree that being overweight is not good, no~ everybody will agree

that levels of cholesterol and other factors involved in the diet are
necessarily the causes of heart disease. For similar reasons he" does
not take a strong public position on smoking, but he does advise anyone
with a heart problem to stop smoking. He further indicated that the
relative risk associated with lung cancer was .very pronounced, but that
the risk was not as clear-cut with heart disease. Dr. Kastenbaum
pointed out that many statements were made concerning the death rate
from lung cancer having reached epidemic proportions, and asked Dr.
Cooper if this situation was true with respect to heart disease. Dr.
Cooper indicated that shortly after World War II, the heart disease rate
appeared to be increasing but that this rate had leveled off and, in
fact, might even He decreasing.
Mr. Mills agreed with Dr. Cooper's reference to other products which
might have adverse effects on people with heart conditions and inquired
about the role of coffee drinking. Dr. Cooper acknowledged that_ people
with certain types of heart disease should o~He advised~to drink
coffee, and that he advised his own patients not to drink coffee. In
this context Dr. Cooper said that he had had a meeting similar to ours
with representatives from the coffee industry. He informed them, as
he did us, that he advised patients with certain forms of heart disease
not to indulge in coffee drinking. He admitted to having been both a
smoker and a coffee drinker at one time, and said that he could In
those days observe changes in his own blood pressure after smoking.a
cigarette. We got the impression, from something he said, that he

has a minor heart condition which has led him to quit smoking as.well
as coffee drinking. However, he did not propose to take ~ public
stand on the subject of coffee drinking. He pointed out that the most
recent information on the adverse effects of coffee drinkin~ was pre-
sented in an article in the New England Journa'l of Medicine. This
article was based on a study done by Dr. Jick and others in the Boston
Collaborative Drug Surveillance Program. Dr. Kaster~aum remarked that
Dr. Cooper's position in this matter was reflected in an editorial in
the same issue of the NEJM written by Drs. Kannel and Dawber of
Framingham Study fame.
Mx. Mills asked Dr. Cooper if he was _anticipating any problems in
getting sufficient funds to carry out his work. Dr. Cooper indicated
that he was having some problems in the 1974 fiscal year, but that he
thought things would be better in 1975.
Dr. Cooper indicated that he feels the position of the Federal govern-
ment on the subject of cigarette smoking is clearly outlined in a report
he had recently received. Its title is "The Report of the President's
Committee on Health Education". Dr. Cooper read us a portion of the
section concerned with the role of cigarettes as a risk factor in heart
disease.
In concluding, Mr. Kornegay reiterated our interest in good research,
and made specific reference to the Council for Tobacco Research and to
the work it was sponsoring. Dr. Gori told Dr. Cooper that Dr. Richard

Bing, Director of Cardiology _at the ~~ton Memorial Memorial Hospital
in Pasadena, California is a me~er of ~R's Scientific Adwiso~ Board.
Dr. Cooper indicated his awareness of a n~er of institutions, including
Hazard, whose researchers were receiving funds both from the tobacco
indust~ ~d the N~I. He saw no ha~ in this, In fact, he encouraged
his grantees to accept research funds from the tobacco indust~. These
grantees were in no jeopardy as far as he is concerned.
Dr. Cooper received us ve~ cordially. ~is a~osphere continued
throughout the meeting. It is our view that though Dr. Cooper is
neither advocate nor friend of the tobacco indust~, he is also not a
zealous ~ti-smoking c~sader. For this reason we feel .that he is not
likely to m~e ~y exaggerated, ~fo~ded, or ill-advised stat~ents
~out smoking. He se~ed to be honestly interested in maintaining
contact ~d welcomed ~y exch~ge of info~ation and views between h~
~d the indust~. He made a point of saying that he has no rese~ations,
whatsoever, ~out meeting with indust~ people.
He is not afraid to meet ~d discuss probl~s with tobacco indust~
representatives as long as the meetings are open ~d not secret.
