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Philip Morris

Even Congressional Research Service Now Reluctantly Admits:Tobacco Smoke Causes High Levels of Cancer in Nonsmokers

Date: 14 Nov 1995 (est.)
Length: 1 page
2048280414
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Area
WORLDWIDE REG AFFAIRS/LIBRARY
Type
PRES, PRESS RELEASE
Document File
2048280245/2048280868/Ets Congressional Research Svce. (Crs)@ 2048280246/2048280600/Ets Crs Compilation 940000 - 960000
Litigation
Stmn/Produced
Named Organization
Ash, Action on Smoking & Health
Congressional Research Service
Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
OSHA, Occupational Safety & Health Administration
Site
N403
Master ID
2048280248/0599
Related Documents:
Named Person
Banzhaf, J.
Author (Organization)
Ash, Action on Smoking & Health
Request
Stmn/R1-048
Date Loaded
05 Jun 1998
UCSF Legacy ID
ejq92e00

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I Even Congressional Research Service Now Reluctantly ~~ Admits: Tobacco Smoke Causes High Levels of Cancer in Nonsmokers I I Even the Congressional Research Service (CRS), which had previously boon critical of the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) report on passive smoking, and which gives great weight to the tobacco Industry's arguments, has been forced to agree that secondhand tobacco smoke causes high levels of cancers and cancer deaths In nonsmokers. In a report Issued today, the CRS reached estimates of lung cancer deaths which are consistent with those of the EPA. I Although other parts of its most recent report are far more conservative than the EPA's estimates, and of the conclusions of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) which is now ~ proposing to ban workplace smoking, even the CRS conclusions would appear to Justify regulation of secondhand smoke under generally accepted governmental regulatory standards. I "Although the CRS's report Is flawed In many ways - Includin.g the unwarranted assumption that there Is a threshold level - it nevertheless demonstrates that even under the assumptions most favorable to the tobacco Industry, tobacco smoke must be regulated like any other proven human carcinogen" says  John Banzhaf, Executive Director of Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) , It was ASH's law suit which forced OSHA to propose a total workplace ban, and Banzhaf - a former , scientist - has testified as an expert witness and lecturer on the dangers of secondhand tobacco smoke. "Perhaps in releasing this report on a day when the Executive Branch Is shut down and unable to respond, those behind the Congressional Research Service report hoped to publicize their views / without any opposition," speculates Banzhaf. ~ However he and others, Including scientists (unlike the authors of the CRS report) who have published ' scientific papers In this area, are available for comment and to offer explanations to members of the i press. I I I I I I FOR RELEASE ONLY AFTER: November 14, 1995 FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL: John Banzhaf (202) 659-4310 Return to Top Return to Press Release List, ASH - ACTION ON SMOKING AND HEALTH 2013 H Street, NW / Washington, DC 20006 / (202) 659-4310 I

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