Philip Morris
Fields
- Author
- Foley, G.J.
- Area
- WORLDWIDE REG AFFAIRS/LIBRARY
- Type
- LETT, LETTER
- LIST, LIST
- Recipient (Organization)
- Congressional Research Service
- Named Person
- Surgeon General
- Recipient
- Mulhollan, D.
- Document File
- 2048280245/2048280868/Ets Congressional Research Svce. (Crs)@ 2048280246/2048280600/Ets Crs Compilation 940000 - 960000
- Author (Organization)
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- Office of Research + Development
- Site
- N403
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Request
- Stmn/R1-048
- 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
- 2048280346-0347 Epa Watch
- 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
- 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 Organization
- Nas, Natl Academy of Sciences
- NCI, Natl Cancer Inst
- Niosh, Natl Inst for Occupational Safety & Health
- Senate
- Congressional Research Service
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- NCI, Natl Cancer Inst
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- UCSF Legacy ID
- njq92e00
Document Images
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`~ S Z UNITED STATES ENVlRONMENTAI PROTECTION AGENCY
~ WASFIiNGTON, D.C. 20460
,
yl~c e.ut4
JLIN 2 3 f994
OFFfCE OF
RESEAnOH AND DEYELOPM[.yT
Dr. Dan Mulhollan
Director
Congressional Research Service
Library of Congress
First and Independence, S.E.
Was:Lington D. C. 20540-7000
Dear Dr. Mulhollan:
I am writing to express misgivings about the discussion of
environaental tobacco smoka (ETS) in the recent Congressional
Research Service (CRS) report entitled "Cigarette Taxes to Fund
Health Care Reform An Economic Analysis" (94-214E).
Speciifically, we disagree with GRS szatements that "[t]he link
between passive sr,:oking and disease is uncertain" (CRS-7) and
that "the apidemiology evidence for passive-smoking-related
disease is weak" (CRS-13). The appraisal by CRS economi sts of the
scientific evidence about the effects of ETS on non-smoking
adults, and on infants and children, is being widely quoted as an
authoritative scientific opinion of CIRS. This is unfortunate
since the CRS has not taken a position on the health effects of
passive smoking, and the economists were careful to state in a
May 11, 1994 Senate hearing that this science is outside of their
area of expertise. The 1986 ETS reports of the II.S. Surgeon
General, and the National Academy of Sciences, as well as the.
1992 Environmental Protection Agency report, all concluded that
ETS is a significant public health hazard and received extensive
peer review before their issuance. Peer review of discussions of
the science in the CRS report would have been helpful and
iraportant since the report raises questions about methods and
interpretations that have already been subjected to extensive
peer review, some in the review of the EPA report, others in the
reviews of all three reports.
The attachment to this letter brings to your attention our
views with respect to.the CRS statements about the EPA assessment
and its results_ In addition the attachment notes alternative
views about scientific (not economic) aspects of weighing health
e=fects of ETS in the economic analysis. The following points are
elaborated in the attachment:
vrru.d on Aaeydee R:,ar

I
Sincerely yours,
f
Tae epidemiology data on ETS and lung cancer show a
remarkable consistency supporting a causal association between
ETS and lung cancer in nonsmoking adults. The observed increased
risk estimates are not large, but are significant for an
environmental exposure, especially considering the inherent
difficulties of studying the effects of a mixture to which
virtually everyone is exposed at some level. Such difficulties
are very likely to hinder the ability to detect an effect if one
exists. To observe consistent, though relatively small, increases
supported by exposure-response trends, in a variety of countries
is highly.significant, particularly considering the difficulties
involved in conducting these types of studies. For these reasons,
it is erroneous to conclude that the overall evidence for an
_effect is weak simply based on the size of observed increases
between spousal smoking and lung cancer. Accepted epidemiology
criteria for causality such as consistency, dose-response
relationships, biological plausibility, specificity, and
temporality, are clearly met by the ETS database.
The EPA report assesses over loo original studies in
reaching its finding that ETS causes several respiratory effects
in children. It is difficult to understand the CRS report's
summary statement, made without analysis, that "many of the
statismical concerns with respect to lung cancer also apply to
respiratory effects in children" (CRS-49), since the statistical
aethods and scieritific issues are guita different in the analysis
of cancer from those in the analysis of respiratory effects.
Many other organizations also have concluded that the
evidence that ETS causes significant health hazards is, in fact,
quite strong. These organizations include the National Academy
of Sciences (1986), the U.S. Surgeon General (1986), the National
"C3nce_r Institute (1993), the National Znstitute of occupational
Safety and Health (1991), and many public health organizations.
We be~lieve the attached discussion can be helpful in your
further consideration of this health issue.
S
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. Attac.~.=ent
2
J. Foley
Acting Assistant Administrator
for Research and Development
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ATTACBMENT
A. E?A's Scientific Apnroach
A.l. Lung Cancer
A.2. Noncancer Respiratory Disorders
8. Public and Scientific Reviews of the EPA Report
C. Differences in Analysis, Process, and Documentation between
the EPA and CRS Reports
D. critique of CRS Criticisms of the EPA Report
E. EPA Comments on the Health Effects Comnongnts
Assessment of Costs due to Passive Smoking
of the CR5
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