Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2010
This contribution was invited because I recently served on a National Research Council Committee which considered and wrote a report on the Epidemiology of Air Pollution. The report was to be released on September 1 1985, and I intended to discuss its conclusions and apply them to the problem before us. The report had not been officially released, so I spoke instead about issues discussed during the committee's deliberations that were likely to be of interest to this group, and are pertinent to future studies in Alaska.
This group is addressing one of the most important issues debated by that National Research Council Committee: is today's ambient air pollution damaging human health, and will ambient pollution be more or less harmful in the future? The role of epidemiology in getting answers to those questions was equally important to us and may be important for those in this conference who will act upon one or more of our recommendatons.
We asked ourselves at the outset whether one comprehensive longitudinal study could be designed to answer the most important health effects questions. The answer was an emphatic ‘no’. There was an equally emphatic ‘no’ to the question of a study or studies to establish safety. Evidence of safety is not just the converse of evidence of risk, and safety is much harder to demonstrate than risk. Whatever the size and rigor of population studies with negative results, they are virtually useless in assuring safety in other populations and circumstances.
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