Philip Morris
Epa Watch
Fields
- Area
- WORLDWIDE REG AFFAIRS/LIBRARY
- Type
- NELE, NEWSLETTER
- Document File
- 2048280245/2048280868/Ets Congressional Research Svce. (Crs)@ 2048280246/2048280600/Ets Crs Compilation 940000 - 960000
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Named Organization
- Dept of Energy
- Dept of the Interior
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- House
- Natl Licensed Beverage Assn
- Natl Restaurant Assn
- OSHA, Occupational Safety & Health Administration
- Science Advisory Board
- Senate
- US Chamber of Commerce
- US Congress
- Congressional Research Service
- Dept of the Interior
- Site
- N403
- Master ID
- 2048280248/0599
Related Documents:- 2048280248-0249 Congressional Research Service Reports on Ets and Lung Cancer
- 2048280250 1
- 2048280251-0329 Crs Report for Congress Environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer Risk
- 2048280330 2
- 2048280331-0332
- 2048280333 Ford Calls for Reopening of OSHA Hearings on Smoking Bans
- 2048280334 Epa / OSHA Findings on Passive Smoking
- 2048280335
- 2048280336-0337 Proposed Ban on Smoking in the Workplace
- 2048280338 3
- 2048280339 Philip Morris Statement on the Congressional Research Service Report on 'environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer Risk'
- 2048280340-0341 Overview of the Crs Report on Ets and Lung Cancer Risk
- 2048280342 3
- 2048280343 A Conversation with Mike Wallace
- 2048280344 Second Smoke's Dangers Doubted Report Critical of Epa, OSHA
- 2048280345 Editorial Up in Smoke
- 2048280348
- 2048280348A-0349 Study Prompts Call for OSHA to Reopen Hearings on Rule Over Secondhand Smoke
- 2048280349A Study Prompts Call for OSHA to Reopen Hearings on Rule Over Secondhand Smoke
- 2048280350 Sinister Smoke? Prove It
- 2048280351 Nra Backs Report Questioning Epa Smoking Study
- 2048280352-0353 Secondhand Smoke Danger Relies on Wisps of Evidence 9500029108
- 2048280354-0355 Indoor Air Review
- 2048280356-0358 Anthology of 950000's Environmental Myths
- 2048280359-0360 Doctors and Scientists in the Anti-Smoking Crusade Stub Out the Facts
- 2048280361 Scientific Proof Eludes Those Who Damn Second-Hand Smoke
- 2048280362-0363 New Congressional Study Shows Minimal Health Effects From Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 2048280364 Cato Environmental Expert Available to Comment on Secondhand Smoke Study
- 2048280365 Cancer Risks for Thee, But Not for Me
- 2048280366-0367 Here's News
- 2048280368 Report on Tobacco Smoke Is Good News for Farmers
- 2048280369-0370 Nam Calls on OSHA to Revise Stringent Air Quality Standards Following Crs Study of Second Hand Smoke
- 2048280371 New Study Questions OSHA Attack on Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 2048280372-0373 Assumptions on Second-Hand Smoke Not Holding Up Under Scientific Scrutiny
- 2048280374-0375 Selected Quotes From Crs Report on Ets
- 2048280376 New Study Demonstrates OSHA Excesses on Regulations
- 2048280377 5
- 2048280378-0381
- 2048280382-0384
- 2048280385-0403 Epa Comments on Crs Draft 'environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer Risk'
- 2048280404-0406
- 2048280407 Comments on the Crs Report 'environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer Risk'
- 2048280408 6
- 2048280409-0412
- 2048280413 7
- 2048280414 Even Congressional Research Service Now Reluctantly Admits:Tobacco Smoke Causes High Levels of Cancer in Nonsmokers
- 2048280415 Congressional Research Service Also Concludes Tobacco Smoke Causes Lung Cancer in Nonsmokers
- 2048280416 Crs Says Tobacco Smoke Kills Nonsmokers But Overall Report Is Flawed and Misleading
- 2048280417 Letters Being Near A Lit Cigarette Has Risks - Whether You're Smoking It or Not
- 2048280418 8
- 2048280419-0488 Crs Report for Congress Cigarette Taxes to Fund Health Care Reform: An Economic Analysis
- 2048280489 9
- 2048280490-0496 Discussion of Source of Claims of 50,000 Deaths From Passive Smoking
- 2048280497 10
- 2048280498-0519 Hearing to Discuss the Possible Health Effects to Non-Smokers of Environmental Tobacco Smoke Wednesday, 940511 9:30 A.M. Hart Senate Office Building, Rm. 216
- 2048280520 11
- 2048280521-0536 Statement of Dr. Jane G. Gravelle Senior Specialist in Economic Policy and Dennis Zimmerman Specialist in Public Finance Congressional Research Service Before the Subcommittee on Clean Air and Nuclear Regulation Committee on Environment and Public Works United States Senate 940511 on Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 2048280537 12
- 2048280538-0553 Cigarette Taxes to Fund Health Care Reform
- 2048280554 13
- 2048280555-0557
- 2048280558-0572
- 2048280573 14
- 2048280574-0582 Comments on Congressional Research Service Assessment of the Health Risks of Environmental Tobacco Smoke
- 2048280583 15
- 2048280584-0598 Comments on the Workshop Draft of Environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer
- 2048280599
- Named Person
- Ford, W.
- Waxman, H.
- Author (Organization)
- Epa Watch
- Request
- Stmn/R1-048
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- ntr65e00
Document Images
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EPA WATCH
A tw(ce-monthly survey of environmental regulatory activities
undertaken by the EPA, the Department of the lnterior. OSHA, the White Hotcse,
the U.S. Congress, and federal, state and legal agencies
VOL 4 NUMBER 21
Congressional Report Faults EPA
on ETS Risk Assessment
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A Congressionally=mandated
report on the potential health
effects of environmental tobacco
smoke (ETS) raises serious questions
about the scientific underpinnings of
EPAs controversial January 1c)3 risk
assessment on passive smoking.
In its risk assessment, EPA concluded
that ETS is a Group A or known human
carcinogen, responsible for about 3,000
lung cancer deaths per year from non-
smokers. The agency's findings were
cited by numerous groups and
government agencies interested in
promoting smoking bans in such public
places as bars and restaurants as well as in
the workplace.
-IN THIS ISSUE-
At the time of its release, the agency's
ETS risk assessment met with, at best,
mixed reviews from scientists and
epidemiologists with no ties to the tobacco
industry. The issue became the subject of
several, sometimes stormy Capitol Hill
hearings, and coincided with a
Congressional debate, still in progress,
over the methodology the agency employs
in conducting its risk assessments.
So heated was the debate that Rep.
Henry Waxman (D-California) who felt
compelled to turn to the non-partisan
Congressional Research Service (CRS) --
an independent research arm of Congress
-- to render its judgment on the ETS
question.
The CRS's findings are contained in
"Environmental Tobacco Smoke and
Lung Cancer Risk, " which was released
on November 14 and largely confirms
most of the arguments raised against
EPA s ETS risk assessment. Although
barred by Congress from making specific
policy recommendations, the CRS report
is nonetheless unsparing in its criticism of
the way EPA's - risk assessment was
carried out and the conclusions the agency
drew from its analysis.
EPA based its ETS risk assessment on
an analysis of over 30 epidemiologic
studies of lung cancer among adult non-
smoking women. These studies, in turn,
relied on spousal smoking as a surrogate
for ETS exposure and . classified the
November 30, 1995
women as "exposed" or "unexposed" on
the basis of whether their husbands
smoked. The lung cancer risk among the
exposed women was then compared to
that of the unexposed women. EPA then
carried out a rarely-used statistical
exercise known as a meta-analysis and
concluded that exposure to ETS increased
the overall risk of lung cancer in non-
smoking women by 1.19 to 1.
"Subject to
Uncertainty"
Since so much of the epidemiologic
data used in the studies EPA analyzed
were based, among other things, on the
sometimes faulty memories (recall bias) of
the individuals interviewed, the results, as
the CRS warns, are to be viewed with
caution.
"The results are not definitive, the
CRS observes. "And even at the greatest
(exposure) levels, the measured risks are
still subject to uncertainty. " Contradicting
EPA's estimates of 3,000 deaths annually
as a result of exposure to ETS, the CRS
finds that "it is possible that very few or
even no deaths can be attributed to ETS. "
Acknowledging that three of the four
most recent epidemiologic studies on ETS
and lung cancer risk found a "statistically
significant exposure risk" for lung cancer
at the "highest" secondhand smoke
exposure levels, the CRS cautions that,

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EPA WATCH PAGE 2
"Even at the greatest . . . exposure levels,
the measured risks are still subject to
uncertainty. "
Focusing on the agency's
methodology, the CRS found fault with
EPA's meta-analysis of the results of
numerous individual studies. The CRS
noted that "combining risk assessments of
several studies at the highest exposure
levels probably yields misleading results. "
Additional uncertainty enters the
picture through what is known as
exposure misclassification, the CRS points
out. Misclassification occurs when, in the
case of EPA's ETS risk assessment, a
control group member identifies herself as
having a smoking husband but is actually
unexposed to ETS, but is still incorrectly
counted as exposed. Adjusting for such
exposure misclassification would thus
increase the measured relative risk.
"It is clear that misclas-
sification and recall bias plague
ETS epidemiology studies, " the
CRS observes. "It is also clear
from the simulations that modest,
possible misclassification and
recall bias rates can change the
from EPA's direct extrapolation from
active to passive smoking, the CRS
observes that, "It is possible that ETS
.exposutes are too small to be the cause of
lung cancer in any meaningful sense..."
In sum, the report confirms the
findings the CRS made last year in
testimony before a Senate subcommittee
that, "The statistical evidence does not
appear to support a conclusion that there
are substantial health effects of passive
smoking. "
OSHA Fares No Better
EPA is not the only Federal agency
the CRS criticizes for its handling of ETS.
Last year, the Occupational Health and
Safety Administration (OSHA) proposed
to regulate indoor air quality (IAQ) in the
workplace. OSHA s proposal included a
November 30, 1995
publication, "Choices in Risk Assessment:
The Role of Science Policy in the
Environmental Risk Management
Process," echoed the CRS by noting that,
"OSHA did not provide an explicit
rationale for the science policy decision
that chronic exposure to ETS increases
lung cancer risk by 20 to 50 percent. "
New Hearings Demanded
Armed with the CRS's findings,
opponents of OSHA's proposed smoking
rules lost little time in blasting EPA and
OSHA for their handling of the ETS
issue. Sen. Wendell Ford (D-Kentucky
and the minority whip in the Senate)
called on OSHA to reopen hearings on the
proposed smoking ban. "This report from
CRS -- a non-partisan and objective
organization -- shows there is absolutely
no scientific justification for
smoking bans or de facto bans like
the proposed rule coming out of
OSHA," he said.
The sentiments of the Kentucky
lawmaker, whose state is a major
tobacco producer, were echoed by
Perhaps the most devastating criticism the
CRS made concerns the biological
plausibility of EPA risk assessment.
measured relative risk results, possibly in
dramatic ways, " the report continues.
Biological Plausibility
Challenged
Perhaps the most devastating criticism
the CRS made concerns the biological
plausibility of EPA risk assessment. The
report points out that the chemical
similarities between mainstream and
sidestream smoke and the association of
active smoking with lung cancer are
reasons for a possible relationship
between ETS and lung cancer. "But, " the
report says, "they do not prove the
relationship, since ETS is substantially
diluted and aged compared to even low
levels of active smoking. Distancing itself
ban on workplace smoking, except in
designated and separately ventilated areas.
OSHA based its proposed workplace
smoking ban largely on EPA s ETS
findings, but also carried out a risk
assessment of its own. The latter fared no
better in the CRS report than did EPA.
"OSHA concluded that the ETS lung
cancer risk ranges from 1.20 to 1.50, " the
CRS points out. "It does not provide any
explanation of how it arrives at this
explanation or how it arrived at this
estimate . . . nor did it indicate what this
risk is relative to."
For OSHA, the CRS's rebuke is
particularly embarrassing, because it is the
second government-funded study issued
this year critical of the agency's ETS risk
assessment. A Department of Energy
a host of trade associations directly
affected by the pending OSHA rule,
including the National Restaurant
Association, the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, and the National Licensed
Beverage Association. By contrast, EPA,
OSHA, and Rep. Waxman's office issued
no statements on the CRS's findings.
It is a virtual certainty that the CRS
report will reignite debate in Washington
over the role of sound science in Federal
government risk assessments. Just five
months ago, EPA's risk assessment on
dioxin, over four years in making, was
shelved by the agency's Science Advisory
Board and sent back to EPA with the
clear recommendation that a crucial
chapter be completely rewritten (see EPA
WATCH, July 15, 1995, p. 1).
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