ML20054E319

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Request for Extension of Time Until 820621 to File Testimony & for ASLB to Set Date by Which Ucs/Ny Pirg Requests for Admissions Must Be Answered.Good Cause Exists Due to Unusually Rapid Hearing Schedule
ML20054E319
Person / Time
Site: Indian Point  Entergy icon.png
Issue date: 06/07/1982
From: Blum J, Holt J, Potterfield
NEW YORK UNIV., NEW YORK, NY, POTTERFIELD, A., PUBLIC INTEREST RESEARCH GROUP, NEW YORK, UNION OF CONCERNED SCIENTISTS
To:
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel
Shared Package
ML20054E310 List:
References
ISSUANCES-SP, NUDOCS 8206110064
Download: ML20054E319 (50)


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  • UNITED STATES OF AERICA

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JUN10 N > C NUCLEAR REGULATORY C0f04ISSION m. y Officeof theSeerstary -11 Docketing & Se:1!ce i

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BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING w BOARD <

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In the Matter of ) Docket Nos. 50-247 SP CONSOLIDATED EDISON C009ANY OF NEW YORK 50-286 SP (Indian Point Unit 2) )I June 7, 1982 POWER AUTHORITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK (Indian Point Unit 3) h))

Uts/NYPIBG EQEST EOR AN EX".ENSIm C' TDE IN WHIG

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'IO FIIE 'IESTIKNY AND EOR 'DE 'IONSING BOARD 'IO SET A DME BY WHIG LCS/NYPIBG BE0WSTS FOR AINTWCN 14ET BE ANSWERED I. LIs/NYPIRG_leXXtSIS N RmALF T 'DE IMERVENORS PER 1982.

'1he Union of Concerned Scientists and the New York Public Interest Research Group, Inc. (UCS/NYPIBG) working r'l-ly with the other inMrvenors have made every effort to neet the Licensing Board's M1%e of June 7,1982 As of for the filing of testimony related to W anien Questions 3 and 4.

today, June 7, the intervenors have obtained and are filing the testimony of In additicn, we have obtained 157 witnes'ses en emergency planning.

ocmnitnents to testify frun 13 additicnal inportant witr;2sses whose testimony See Appendix A for oormunications fran and is not ready at the piesent time.

We are requesting 'an extension of time until resures of these witnesses.

15, 1982 for one June 21, 1982 for 12 of these witnesses and until July witness.

'Ibe testimony cf scme of these witnesses may be ready earlier and we will subnit these to the Licensees and the other parties inmediately upon DO K O hochf7 m_

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cmpletion.

Itnis ou'rhiderstanding that the first week of hearings is reserved i

primarily for testinmy by NIC Staff and FDR witnesses, so that nme of l the 13 witnesses would be testifying before July 6. In the event that the intervenors were asked to put on testinmy during the #irst week, we would l l

guarantee that none of the witnesses whose tine for filing had been extended would be put on during that week. @ us, NBC Staff, Licensees, and the Board )

would have at least a full tm weeks to review the testinmy, notwithstanding its late filing. mis is the same anount of time that the June 7,1982 I deadline provides for reviewing testimony put on during the first week of hearings.

Good cause exists for the late filing of all 13 witnesses by virtue of the llearings' unusually rapid schedule and the fact that the intervenors have had to preparu a very large amount of testimony in a short ti1re. In addition,  !

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good cause is provided by factors specific to the testimony of particular l witnesses.

For exanple, BOBERP lORRIS is a traffic ccntrol engineer who is performing an independent review of the Parsons Brinckerhoff evacuation time estimates.

His testimony is of critical importance for developing a cmplete record in the hearings. Dr. terris could not begin his review of the tine estimates until he had obtained certain primary data from Parsons Brinckerhoff and the Licensees. Amanda Potterfield, attorney for NYPIRG, began seeking this data on April 27, 1982 by letters addressed to Licensee attorneys Charles lbrgan, Jr.

and Brent L. Brandenburg. Despite Mr. !brgan's cooperation, obtaining the data proved difficult and required a nuter of phone calls. It was finally obtained on May 17, 1982. Dr. !brris ommenced his review of it prmptly, and infonted Ms. Potterfield on May 26, 1982 that as a result of his review he vould be willing to testify. However, Dr. Morris's task is a difficult one

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. pp3 that could not be cartpleted by June 7. Dr. }brris provides assurance that his testimony will be ampleted by June 21. PHILIP'WCLFE, an Ossining mathematician and operations researcler, is also subnitting testinmy about defects in the methods used to estimate evacuation tines. Dr. Wolfe's work has been delayed for the sape rea<rwis as Dr. Morris's.

An extension of time is also requested for seven experts who will be -

testifying about the human response assurptions underlying Indian Point emergency planning. These are: T. BERRY BPAZEUltN, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard MMiml School; DAVID EMIND, Ph.D., Professor of Olild Develoirent, Tufts University; IAWRENCE KAAGAN, Senior Research Associate, Yankelovich, Skelly, and White, Inc.; JETOE KAGAN, Ph.D., Professor of Hunan Developtent, Harvard thiversity; HOBERP JAY LIFIIN, M.D., Foundations Fund Research Professor of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine; CHRISTOPHER MAXELL, Director of Respiratory Therapy, Ctanunity General Osteopathic Hospital, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; and 14JRRAY }ELBIN, Ph.D., Professor of Sociology, Boston University.

Each of these experts will contribute inportant testimony to the hearings.

Dr. Kagan, Dr. Brazeltcm and Dr. Elkind are all internationally recognized exrcrts en the behavior of parents and children. Dr. Lifton han studied and will testify on the unique nature of radiological emergencies. Dr. Melbin is an authority on hunan behavior at night. He will identify weaknesses in the Indian Point emergency plans that stem from a failure to .take into account differences betwen behavior at night and behavior during the day. Mr. Maxwell has studied the behavior of medical perscnnel within a twelve mile radius of Three Mile Island during the accident at that plant. Mr. Kaagan works for a well known public opinion research agency and has acumulated data evidencing a & cline of public trust in industry and governmental officials. He will

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explain dat the decline of ocmfidence na&4r==11y means for efforts to rely upon disaster research fran previous hadas. j i

An extensica of time is also requested fcir INES JANGGt, Past Prami,%t and member of the Board of Directors, New York State Parents of Haart-- '

Impaired Otildren 'IH3mS P. JtID, Assistant Director of Instituticmal .

Daaaarch at Rx:kland Oansmity @llaga; and B0f AIJERP, M.'D., Professor of -

Environmental Nadir'Ne, New York thiversity Medical School. Ms. Janger will testify concerning the special pr+1- posed to deaf children by the energency plans, and Mr. Judd will present results of a survey now under way in Ibckland 1

! county suplementing the Wstchester survey about Miich testimony (by Richard Altschuler) has already been schmitted. Dr. Albert will testify as a :=M< al expert on the effects of different levels of radiaticm avpr=we. Sudt testimony is important in the emergency planning phase of the hearings in order to clarify i .the significance ' f radiation a-we that rmld occur in spite of evacuation.

'Ibe one excx an to the request for an extension until June 21, is for the testinony of VICIOR W. SIDEL, M.D., Chairman, Department of Social Medicine, obntefiore Ilospital and Medical Center. Dr. Sidel, who will testify on maxinun acceptable dose levels for adults and children, is currently in China, but will return in a few weeks and has agreed to file testimony by July 15, 1982.

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II. 'IliE BOARD SHOULD SET Jt.NE 22, 1982 AS 'IHE DME BY WIIOI ANSWERS 'IO IIE/NYPIRG'S RBQUESTS FOR AINISSIGI MBT BE FIIED.

On tiay 28, 1982 UCS/NYPIRG served requests for admissics on the Licenaaan, Con Edison and PASNY, and cn the NBC Staff. No response has yet been received.

10 C.F.R. S 2.742(b) states that "each requested ^^nianirm shall be deemed made unless, within a time designated by the presiding officer or, the Ocamission, and not less than ten (10) days after service of the request of such further tire as may be allowed on noticm, the party to idxan the request is directed serves on the requesting party" cither w.itten objecticns or a sworn denial l-- . -. - - ... _

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NWS of the matter regmsted for admission. UCS/NYPIRG asks the Board to set i

June 22 as the date by which the requested nutters will be deemed admitted '

I if there is still no response. June 22, the opening of evidentiary hearings on the emergency planning phase of the hearings, will provide the NTC Staff and the Li nsees ample time within which to respond.

Ib ly J riff M. plum, Esq.

7 Y6rk UrMversity Law School 423 Vanderbilt Hall 40 Washington Square South New York, New York 10012 (212) 598-3454 or the Union cerned Scientists

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Amanda Potterfield, Esq. 6 P.O. Box 384 Village Station New York, ?Mw York 10014 (212) 227-0265 r the York Public Interest Research Group l

Holt '-

F York Public Interest Research Group, Inc.

S tarray Street New York, New York 10007 (212) 349-6460 Dated: June 7, 1982 New York, New York

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I APPENDIX A Dr. Philip Wolfe Spring Valley Road

. Ossining, NY As a mathematician specializing in the ap-

. plications of operations research I would like to comment on t e on the adequacy of the methods unds in making the evacuation time estimates.

In the planning document entitled "Westchester County Radiological Emer6ency Response Plan" and

" Procedures," I have found no description of methodology to support the plannin6 estimates of evacuation times.

I plan to look marefully at the criteria set forth in NUREG - 0654 and the separate document prepared by the planners, " Evacuation Time Estimates within the Plume Exposure PathwayaEmergency Plannin6 Zones and to analyze the methodolo67-l l

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I WILL SUBMIT WRITTEN TESTIMONY REG ARDING THE BEHAVIOR OF CHILDREN '

AND PARENTS IN A RADIOLOGICAL EMERGENCY AT INDI AN POINT BY JUNE 21 D AVID ELKIND

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3' June 1982 Ms. Amanda Potterficid, Esq.

New York Public Interest Research Group 9 Murray Street New York, New York 10007

Dear Ms. Potterfield:

It is my intention to offer testimony in the ' matter of plans and programs for public safety in the vicinity of the Indian Point nuclear facilities.

The nature of my testimony will be determined by a wide array of public opinion data which I will have collected, or have analyzed upon collection by others, concerning:

1) - trends in public opinion on the subject of nuc-p)

(- lear power facilities in general, and in public receptivity to such nuclear facilities in a com-munity's " backyard."' I will also address the question of the public's perception of the safety of these facilities.

2) - trends in measured public confidence in both gov-ernmental and business institutions, including the " believability" and trustworthiness of offi-cials and organizations considered to be those most responsible for communicating with the pub-lic on matters of safety and appropriate policies for dealing with nuclear power facilities.

I will submit, by June 21 of this year, the written form of my testimony, including the sources of such public opinion data as I cite, and will be available to testify in person

, after that date.

Sincerely yours,

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,~ Larry datagan Senior Research Associate Assistant to Chairman (v~)

". 7 ". \l A Di sun \\ 1;N I'l; Nla ) Ol!K, N. Y. It HrJJ - 212 7".2 7"dk)

LARRY KAAGAN -

O LARRY KAAGAN is Senior Associate and Assistant to the Chairman i

of Yankelovich, Skelly & White, Inc., the New York-based public opinion research firm. With the firm's chairman, Daniel Yankelovich, he has written and lectured widely on public opinion in the areas of electoral politics, tax policy, nuclear energy, foreign affairs and social history.

Most' recently, he has co-authored, with Daniel Yankelovich, public opinion analyses in Foreign Affairs, Psychology Today, and other periodicals.

An article, "The American Public Looks at Nuclear," appeared in ALCOA 81, the magazine of the Aluminum Company of America. Mr. Kaagan has also conducted seminars on American political opinion at the Brookings Institution and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

f A graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University, Mr. Kaagan served as a post graduate research director at O i the Univer,sity's Center for Urban Af f airs. He has been a visiting  !

I professor in the Honors Program at Villanova University, and a planning j consultant to the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

He has been with Yankelovich, Skelly and White since 1979, and concentrates his research in the firm's public policy analysis program, 5/82 f i

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cmt of nuclear rcactors remains high.

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in its more than 20 years of operation of nuclear power continues to con- J jure a mixed set ofimages: some -. . .I and mary,that the American continuing publica sutbri- good, some bad and some unclear.

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safe, according to the authors of the mental hazards for the uncertain ad- L 'N a following paper. vantages and rising costs of nuclear W This report by Yankelovich and power. In some wa s the" energy Kaagan reflects the uncertainty sur- optimism"of Presicfen,t Reagan andhe.we,_m.;h

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.W ' jN a~g rounding ihe nuc! car issue. The cur- the coincident timing of the 1981 rent, more optimisk energy picture international oil glut cloud rather in the U.S. is not helping to dispel than clarify public attit udes toward _ _ . .

that uncertainty.Today's optimism nuclear energy.

could be, however, the calm before As a pragmatic and results-minded 34 MA > - 8 Ef%__ ?O_' '. P.M= ^! ' 2NM the storm. Opinions vary. There is a people, Americans reject the idea of worldwide oil surplus today. More closing the nation's existing nuclear power plants and forbidding the con-

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move,which would foreclose an op-no time to Iret about building addi-tion that might yet improve our m i -= r, tionalpower plants,or to wrangle over ihe emotional nuclear issue. Bu t erergy posture, met with strong dis- 1 h j f1

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our country has been experiencing a approval even in the immediate af ter-weakened economy. And to 6 row, roath of the" scare"at Three Mile still accurate to say that most Ameri-even modestly,in the next two Island,when an ABClHarris poll cans view the energy problem as an decades, we are certain to need more found an 80 percent majority opposed affliction of high costs. Even with c!cctricity. America cannot rely in- to a " permanent shutdown"of all nu- growing concern about dependence definitely on fossil fuels, natural gas (Jear plants. On the other hand, pub- on foreign nations, and a substantial and oilin particular. As the authors lic concerns about plant safety, waste degree of irritation at the leverage point out, Americans arepragmatic, disposal, emergency preparedness wielded by large oil companies, eight and they are not cloemg the door on and the" human factor have been out of 10 Americans in our surveys using and espanding nuclear power- rising steadily since long before cite high prices as the number one yet. lint fears iemam. Three Mile Island. Even as the feature'of the country's energy The number one mniern aluut Administration in Washington gears dilemma.

energy today appears to be its cost. up its efforts to promote nuclear Significantly, the concern over the a Ilut a far mese du.turbmg. long range technology as a viable energy source, c urrent cost of energy does not trans- T mocea n for Altoa is wht ther m the the American people are pro'foundly late into ready perception of nuclear decades lo mme, there will be oneigy ambivalent on the subject. power as a lower-cost alternative to enough to meet the muntry's needs. Althou;;h there has been a rising oil. In fact, growing segments of the TJe Dibr awareness of re>ource depletion,it is public, and significant numbers of

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The public likes solar; it is something howerintroduced the" Atoms for

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. .E But if experience with OPEC has when fear of the atom will begin to embittered the American public disappear from the minds of people."

toward the economics of oil, high ex- Three years later, when George W. ~

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pectations for solar energy have dim- Gallup asked people for their reaction J.# N Q M c g h 8 j g,.;g med a little each year by virtue of"the to the prospect of an atomic plant in long wait" factor. In 1978, more than their community, a 69 percent major-were not afraid; three-quarters of the public solar power as an energy technology Eisenhower identified ity said they's dream seemed s,

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' that would help the nation out ofits realized. But the growing environ-

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late 1960s called many technologies and industries into doubt. While pub-

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In the short term, conservation via lic skepticism about nuclear energy

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' '. - c ' improved auto efficiency, better may have reached a highly visible home insulation and greater reliance peak after the accident in Harrisburg, on mass transit are more appealing many of the questions raised by nu-prospects to the public than more clear opponents and by more than 20

__ a .t .;. A ?, ,,y q ;; C ,*j.- .- p. 4 nuclear facilities. Looking only as far years of experience with nuclear

-w as the 1990s, the public sees greater power remain unresolved.

energy gains being made by expand- Long before the episode at Three ing domestic oil exploration and pro- Mile Island, a nuclear uneasiness be- '

P- ' . r duction than by building more nu- gan to emerge. Even in 1974, a 44 percent plurality in a Roper poll felt

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When the calendar is flipped for- an atomic ener;y plant in their com-ward, however, and people a re asked munity would "present dangers,"al-3 gg '

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3t 10,i au , JU .la= sD to play a major role in solving Ameri- (1977) CBhercent New York in a subsequent Times survey well informed business, government ca's energy proble,ms into the next ' still approved of building such a plant and interest group leaders as well, an interesting shift takes in their community' Toda the mar-cite nuclear energy on the same list centurdo,lar place. power remains the gins fluctuate, but the amb,ivalence as oil as a "high cost" energy path. It " sweetheart" technology, favored by grows. Although 50 percent of the is also significant that for several more of the public than any other as public feels we should" continue to years, a steadily growing minority clean, efficient and non-threatening. build" nuclear power plants,73 per ,

has expressed a willingness to pay But what follows it as number two cent qualify that by saying construc-higher electric bills if such an expense on the list of long-term energy pros- tion should take place under stricter (

would buy "no more nuclear power pects? Nuclear power. Why the turn- federal supervision,and only a 46 pla n t s." around? The answer has less to do percent plurality nationwide would Instead. the public has turned its with any expected failure of conser- vote "yes"on a referendum to locate attention and its hopes to an energy vation strategies or fossil fuel sup- a nuclear plant within 50 miles of technology whith appears to offer plies than the hope that problems their homes. Although there remains

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currently be>etting the nuclear power a vaguely favorable tilt to public opin-(Uth none of the ominous environ- industry will be resolved in the gen- ion on preserving the nuclear option, mental and safety drawbacks asso- eration ahead (but, by implication, especially in the"long run," there is ciated with either the production and not before then). nothing vague about public sensitivi-in

89 As a pragmatic and results- Although there has been a rising Whether the question pertains 10 minded people, Americans reject awareness of resource depletion, the willingness to see a nuclear the idea of closing the nation's itis still accurate to say that generating plant in one's com-existing nuclear power plants most Americans view the energy munity, or a more general as-cnd forbidding the construction problem as an affliction of high sessment of the pros and cons g cf new facilities.Such a move, costs. Even with growing con- of nuclear power, women are which would foreclose an option cern about dependence on for- more resistant to" going nucicar" ,

that might yet improve our ener- eign nations,and a substantial than men,the young more nega-gy posture, met with strong dis- degree ofirritation at the lever- tive on the subject than other citi-a aproval evenin the immediate age wielded by large oil com- zens, and the better-educated a"termath of the" scare"atThree panies,eight out of 10 Americans more likely to oppose nuclearin-f.11Ie Island. In our surveys cite high prices as stallations than the less well thenumberonefeatureof the educated.

country's energy dilemma.

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ties to the dangers of nuclear power. public safety from the hazards of agencies chartered to regulate their Put simply,about half of the nuclear waste disposal and transport. use and safeguard us from the omi-American public is concerned that Similar large majorities, which have nous dangers of atomic energy.

nuclear energy is unsafe. Within that grown annually since Mm Three Many of America's energy-inten-half, a small numbcr are unalterably Mile Island, cite safcty procedures at sive industries look down a hard, opposed to an expansion of nuclear nuclear plants as another area where realistic road toward the year 2000 power under any circumstances. But we have~not gone"far enough" to and see serious difficulties maintain-of greater importance are those who protect both the environment and ing themselves as fossil fueled en-are withholding their approvalof the public well-being. Swelling ma - tities. They see the capacity to gener-nuclear power because we" don't jorities also name nuclear contamina- ate nuclear power as pointing toward know enough"and"hasen't gone far tion of water, as well as health prob- a path out of difficult and costly enough"in guarding aga:nst the com- lems associated with radioactive times, and on the narrow technical pelling hazards of nuclear accidents seepage, as topics of concern. And question of"can it be done~ they are and providing for the safe disposalof while these issues arise most promi- certainly correct that it can. But untih radioactive waste. nently in the arguments of anti- the nuclear industry, government Support for, and opposition to, nuclear activists,it should be stressed regulators and other businesses that nuclear power also draws an interest- that among the general public, even desire a stable future energy supply i ing demographic picture. Whether those who support nuclear power are address and answer the profound the question pertains to the willing- increasingly distressed at the linger- anxieties now riddling the public l ness to see a nuclear generating plant ing questions of industrial and public consciousness about nuclear safety, in one's community, or a more gen- safety. the stalemate is likely to continue.

eral assessment of the pros and cons It will be no easy matter to allay The langer we wait for these con-of nuclear power, women are more the concerns about radioactive dan- cerns to be resolved, the more costly resistant to" going nuc! car"than gets harbored even by nominal sup- will each imagined nuclearinstalla-men, the young more negative on the porters of nuclear power. Any" heat- tion become; time thus favors the op-subject than other citizens, and the ing up"of international tensions and ponents of nuclear power. An"in better-educated more likely to orrose re-opened debate on the scope, size principle" desire to see safe, auto-nuclearinstallations than theless and placement of America's nuclear nomous and inexpensive energy

'vell educa ted. By region, those in militan, arsenal will undoubtedly alternatives in the future, and the the Northeast and Western rtates penetrate thoughts concerning the desire that someday nuclear be among are most opposed to nuclear power; generation of electricity by nuclear the first of those options, should not those living in the North-Central means. Israel's attack on an Iraqi be misread. A strateg*y which focuses and Southern states most likely to nuclear facility may already have on price and slights safety is a danger-support it. served to sharpen the mental connec- ous risk for those who foresee the Uut nuclear opponents, whoever tion between the military and " peace- nuclear option improving its appeal they are and wheres er they live, are ful" uses of nuc! car energy. Further, as the cost of oil continues to rise.

not alone in espressing explicit con- the American public remains strongly The combined specters of toxic, en-cerns about nuclear po.ver. Tully 70 concerned about the environmental vironmental and genetic damage percent of all Americans say they are and safete questions raised by 10- weigh heavily on the public con-worried about the pmblem of radio- cating nu' clear power plants n' ear sciousness. Nuclear power that is as active waste disposal. Nearly eight densely populated areas. Those ques- safe as the public wants it will not out of 10 say that even in view of the tions have not been satisfactorily come cheaply, if it comes at allE country's nkd for energy, we have answered either by the nuclear in-

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VITA ,

I JEROME KAGAN I

bate of Birth: February 25, 1929 Nationality: USA 1 Place of Birth: Newark, N.J. Sex: Male

Title:

Professor of Human Development -

Education: Rutgers University B.S. 1950 Biology & Psychology Yale University Ph.D. 1954 Psychology Harvard University M.A. 1964 .

(hon.)

Honorary Organizations: American Academy of Arts and Sciences Phi Beta Kappa Sigma Xi Prizes: Hofheimer Prize for Research, American Psychiatric Association Wilbur Lucius Cross Medal, Yale University

. Major Research or Professional Interest: Cognitive and personality developnent during the first decade Professional and/or Research Experience:

Harvard University Professor of Human Development 1964-present Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences Fellow 1979-1980 Tels Research Institute Chairman, Dept. of Psychology 1959-1964 Fels Research Institute Senior Research Associate 1957-1959

- U.S. Army Hospital, West Point .Research Psychologist 1955-1957 Chio State University Instructor in Psychology 1954-1955 Clifford Beers Guidance Clinic Clinical Psychologist 1953-1954 ,

Partial List of Publications:

Kagan, J. & Moss, H. A. Birth to Maturity. New York: Wiley, 1962.

Hussen, P. H., Conger, J. J., & Kagan, J. Child Development and -

Personality (5th ed.). New York: Harper & Row.1979.

Kagan, J., Henker, B. A. Developmental Psychology. Chapter 1. Annual Review of Psychology, 1966, 1 , 1-50. *

. Kagan, J. Learning, attention, and the issue of discovery. In L. S. -

Shulman & E. R. Keisler (Eds.). Imarning by Discovery. Chicago:

Rand McNally, 1966.

Kagan, J. A developmental approach to conceptual growth. Klausmeier, H. J. & Harris, C. W. (Eds.), Analyses of Concept Learning.

New York: Academic Press, 1966,97-115.

Kagan, J. (Ed.) . Creativity and Learning. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, O 1967.

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VITA - JEROME KAGAN .

h Ktgan, J. On cultural deprivation. In Proceedings of Conference on Biology and Behavior. New York: Rockefeller University Press, 1968, 211-250.

Kagan, J. Personality ' Development . In I. Janis, (Ed.), Personality Dynamics.

New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1969.

Kagan, J. and Havemann, E. Psychology: An Introduction. New York: ,,

Harcourt, Brace (4th ed.), 1980.

Kagan, J. Change and Continuity in Infancy. New York: John Wiley, 1971. -

Kagan, J. Understanding Children. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1971.

Kagan, J. A concept of adolescence. Daedalus, 1971, 100, 997-1012. j Kagan, J., Talbot, N.. B., Eisenberg, L. E. (Eds.). Behavioral Sciences in Pediatrics. Philadelphia: Saunders, 1971.

Kagan, J. Do children think? Scientific American, 1972, 226, 74-82.

eKagan, J. Discrepancy, temperament and infant distress. In M. Lewis and L. Rosenblum (Eds.), Origins of Behavior: Fear. New York: John Wiley, 1974, 229-245.

Kagan, J. The emergence of apprehension to peers. In M. Lewis and L. Rosenblum (Eds.), origins of Behavior: Social Interaction, Vol. 3. New York:

John Wiley, 1975.

Kagan, J. Emergent themes in human development. American Scientist, 1976, 64, 186-196.

Kinney- D. K. and Kagan, J. Infants' attention to auditory discrepancy.

Child Development, 1976, 47, 155-164.

Hopkins, J. R., Zelazo, P. R., Kagan, J., Jacobson, S. Reactivity to discrepancy. Generic Psychology Monographs, 1076, 93, 27-62.

Kagan, J. The child in the family. Daedalus, 1977, Vol. 106, 33-56.

Kagan, J., Kearsley, R. B., and Zelazo,.P. Infancy. Cambridge, MA: Harvard

' University Press, 1978.

Kagan, J. The Growth of the Child. New York: Norton, 1978.

Kagan, J., Linn, S., Mount, R., Reznick, J. S. and Hiatt, S. Asymmetry of inference in the dishabituation paradigm. Canadian Journal of Psychology, i 1979, 33, 288-305.

l Kagan, J. and Brim, O. G. Constancy and Change in Human Development.

Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1980.

Kagan, J., Hans, S., Markowitz, A., Lopez, D. and Sigal, H. Validity of child-ren's self-reports of psychological qualities. In B. A. Maher (Ed.),

l Proeress inExperimental Personality Research. New York: Academic Press, 1982.

Kagan, J. Developmental categories and the premise of connectivity. In R. Lernet; (Ed.), Developmental Psychology: Historical and Philosiophical Perspectives. New York: Academic Press-(in press).

Kagan, J. The Second Year. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press (in press).

Kagan, J. , Classification of the child: Historical trends in the study of human development. In P. H. Mussen (Ed.), Manual of Child Psychology, (3rd ed.). New York: John Wiley. (in press).

Kagan, J. Heart rate and heart rate variability as signs of a temperamental dimension in infants. In C. E. Izard (Ed.), The Measurement of Emotion.

New York: Cambridge University Press (in press).

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I**- ** VITA - JEROME KAGAN ,

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Consultant Positions.

Consultant, Dept. of Pediatrics, Massachusetts General Hospital, 1965-  !

Hember, Board of Scientific Affairs. American Psychological Association. )

1965-1966. -

Editorial Consultant: Child Development i Journal Experimental Child Psychology Journal Consulting Psychology ..:

- Merrill-Palmer Quarterly Psychological Bulletin ,.

i Journal of Educational Psychology it Member, Committee on learning and the Educational Process, Social -'

Science Research Council. 1966-1970. ~

Committee on Fellowship Evaluation, National Academy of Sciences, 1967,.1974.

Consulting Editor, Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., 1965- h President, Division of Developmental Psychology, American Psychological li Association, 1966-1967.

Advisory Committee on Training, National Institute Child Health and Development, 1966-1968.

^

  • Member, Panel ca Educational Research, President's Science Advisory Committee, 1969-1972.

Board of Directors, Foundation to Improve Television (Boston, Mass.)

1969-O run 1 on neve1 P ent.

  • tion 1 Institue or =ducati n. 1973-1974.

Board of Directors, Eastern Psychological Association, 1973-1975.

Board of Directors, Foundations' Fund for Research in Psychiatry, ,

1970-1974. l Member, Committee on Brain Sciences, National Academy of Sciences, t

. 1971-1978.

President, Eastern Psychological Association, 1974-1975.

Associations: 1 American Psychological Association j i

Society for Research in Child Development American Asanciation for Advancement of Science Fellow. American Academy of Arts and Sciences Eastern Psychological Association

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, e Yae University/ -

SCHOOL OF MEDICINE O\ Department ofPsychiatry 25 Park Street New Hann, Connecticut 06519 June 1, 1982 Amanda Potterfield, Esq.

New York Public Interest Research Group, Inc.

9 Murray Street New York, N.Y. 10007

Dear Ms. Potterfield:

I am currently Foundations' Fund Research Professor of Psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, and will base my testimony on 28 years of professional study of human responses to catastrophe and to various kinds of " extreme situations." My testimony will take up the following issues:

1. - The distinction between natural disasters (hurricanes, tornadoes, tidal waves, earthquakes, floods) and man-mado disasters (fires, explosions, failure of dams, chemical spills, etc.). I will discuss the

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\- important psychological differences between the two.

2. There is a special sub-category of man-made disaster, characterized by what I have called invisible contamination. This is caused by an agent that is not detectable by the human senses such as ionizing radiation.
3. Disasters involving ionizing radiation bring about a set of responses now known as the Radiation Response Syndrome. The syndrome is primarily a product of fear of delayed radiation effects and of the possibility of transmitting those effects to subsequent generations.

The special fear associated with' Radiation Response Syndrome is related to the invisibility of the contaminating agent; its delayed effects and the inevitable uncertainty around them; the persistent fear of cancer; diffuse symptoms that overwhelm individuals and confuse patients and physicians as well; extreme anger and the sense of having been made into a " guinea pig" or a laboratory animal; the sense that one's entire life has been mysteriously altered; and the general impairment of human relationships.

4. In summary, human responses to emergencies growing out of various aspects of nuclear power plants are so strikingly different from those reported for other disasters that the latter cannot be taken a

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June 1, 1982 ..

as a guide on which to base emergency planning.

Yours sincerely, h l

b d4% '79 Robert Jay Lifton, M.D. l l

Foundations' Fund Research Professor of Psychiatry P.S. It is my intention to submit my completed testimony on or before June 21, 1982, rnd to be available for cross-examination in July.

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CURRICULUM VITAE Name: Robert Jay Lifton Address: 25 Park Street, New Haven, CT 06519 Date of Birth: May 16, 1926 Place of Birth: New York City Education:

1942-1944 Cornell University (pre-medical, biology major) 1948 M.D. New York Medical College Postdoctoral Training: ' ' '

Internship and Residencies:

1948-1949 Intern (rotating), Jewish 1949-1951 Resident in Psychiatry,' ,. Hospital of Brooklyn, N.Y.

Veterans Administration.plthte University gg'ogram, Medical Northport Center, and Brooklyn, N.Y.

1957-1960 Candidate, Boston Psychoanalytic Institute Research Fellowships:

1954 Fellow, The Asia Foundation, Hong Kong 1954-1955 Research-Fellow, Washingqqg School of Psychiatry, Hong Kong and Washington, D.C.

1956 Fellow in Psychiatry, Wghtgr Reed Army Institute of Research Licensure and Certification:

1949 Diplomate, Natio,nal Board of Medical Examiners l Actdemic Appointments:

1 l 1956-1961 Research Associate in Psyggjatry, Harvard Medical School

, , (Massachusetts General Hospital), and Associate in East ersity, Cambridge and Boston -

l 1961-1967 Asian Studies, Foundations' Harvard Fund Upfg$2ch Associate Professor of for Resg f Psychiatry, Yale Univers(tf_ School of Medicine, New Haven

! ~1967- -

Foundations' Fund for Re ,ch Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University School o edicine 1964- ,

Member, Council on East (s{9n Studies, Yale University O

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Hospital Appointments: ,

1956-1960 AssociateinPsychiatry,MassachusettsGeneralHospital,lll Boston 1961- Associate in Psychiatry, Yale-New Haven Hospital Other Professional Positions and Major Visiting Appointments:

1966-1971 Special five-year Fellowship awarded in combination by Ford Foundation and Foundations' Fund for Research in Psychiatry for research and research training in social and cultural psychiatry 1960-1961 Research Associate in Psychiatry, Tokyo University 1963 Visiting Lectureship in Social Psychiatry, Tulane University, New Orleans 1964 Visiting Lectureship in East Asian Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 1972 Berry Lectureship in Psychology and Religion, University of Hawaii, Honolulu 1973 Blazer Lectureship, University of Kentucky, Frankfort 1974 Visiting Lecturer, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh 1978-1979 Visiting Fellow, Max Planck Institute for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Munich, West Germany 1980 Messenger Lectureship, Cornell University, Ithaca Awards and Honors:

1969 National Book Award in the sciences, and Van Wyck Books Award for nonfiction, for Death in Life: Survivors of Hiroshima 1970 Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Public Service Award, New York Society of Clinical Psychologists Alumni Medal, New York Medical College 1971 Stephen Jewett Memorial Lecture, Society of Medical Psychoanalysts Honorary Doctor of Science, Lawrence University, Appleton, Wisconsin 1972 Karen Horney Lecture Award, American Academy of Psycho-analysis. New York City St. Peter's College Centennial Award, Jersey City 1973 Mount Airy Foundation Gold Medal Award for Excellence in Psychiatry, Denver, Colorado Honorary Doctor of Science, Merrimack College, North Andover, Massachusetts Hofstra University Faculty Distinguished Scholar Award, Hempstead, New York 1974 Nomination for National Book Award, for Home From the War Nobel Lectureship, Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, Minnesota O

, , l William G. Menninger Memorial Lectureship, National Association of Private Psychiatric Hospitals 0- 1975 Hiroshima Gold Medal, Hiroshima, Japan Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, Wilmington College, Wilmington, Ohio 1977 Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, New York Medical College, New York City 1980 Yad Vashem Medal, Jerusalem, Israel Commencement Address, Tufts Medical School, Medford, Massachusetts Lewis H. Loeser Memorial Lectureship, New Jersey Psychiatric Society, East Orange Annual Holocaust Lectureship, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 1981 Holocaust Commemoration Lectureship, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 1982 Franz Alexander Memorial Lectureship, Southern California Psychoanalytic Society--Cedars-sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles Major Committee Assignments:

1962-1964 Behavioral Sciences Study Section, National Institute of Mental Health 1963-1964 Consultant, New York Bar Association Committee on the Invasion of Privacy

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1966- Organizer and coordinator, Wellfleet Working Group in

! Psychohistory, Wellfleet, Massachusetts l 1973-1974 Professional Consultants Group, to Arnold & Porter and l 1977-1978 to Williams and Connolly, on psychic damage among l

survivors of the Buffalo Creek flood disaster of February 1972 1980- Professional Consultants Group to Harmon & Weiss and David Berger, P.A., on psychological effects of Three Mile Island nuclear accident of 1979 l

Editorial Boards: '

1974- Consulting Editor, Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 1975- Editorial Advisory Board, International Encyclopedia of Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis, and Psychology Editorial Board, The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol

, Abuse l 1977- Board of Editors, Psychohistory Review (Group for the Use of Psychology and History, affiliate of the American Historical Association) 1981- Advisory Board, Zygon: Journal of Religion & Science

)

-4 M:mbe:: ships:

1951-g 1956-American Psychiatric Association (Fellow)

American Academy of Psychoanalysis Association for Asian Studies American Anthropological Association 1962-Wellflect Psychohistory Group Physicians for Social Responsibility (Board of Directors, 1981-)

1980-International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War Major Research Interests:

1. Psychological behavior in extreme situations, including holocaust, war, and coercive persuasion (specific studies of Chinese " thought reform," atomic bomb survivors in Hiroshima, and Vietnam veterans)
2. Psychological components of mass killing (specific study of medical behavior in Auschwitz and Nazi doctors in general)
3. General psychological aspects of war and peace, and of attitudes around nuclear weapons 4.

Psychological aspects of individual, social, and historical change (specific studies of Japanese youth and innovative young American professionals) g 5.

shift in psychiatric paradigm from instinct and defense to symboliza-tion of life and death (death and the continuity of life), and applicability of latter paradigm to standard psychiatric syndromes as well as to historical issues 6.

Methods and concepts in psychological study of historical problems l 7.

Contemporary psychological styles (specific studies of " Protean" i

expertaentation and of constricted cult behavior)

Tacching Experience:

! 1956-1960 organized and conducted seminars at Massachusetts General Hospital, for psychiatric residents and clinical psycholo-gists, social and cultural aspects of psychiatry Lectures and seminars on research on thought reform and psychological issues in East Asia, to Harvard graduate students in East Asian Studies, in course and in programs organized by others l 1958-1960 Participated in planning of course at Harvard College by David Riesman in the study of American society, and gave lectures and seminars on psychosocial questions l

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1962- Seminars at Yale for psychiatric residents and graduate

' k'- students in social sciences and history on social psychiatry, holocaust, individual and social change, psychiatric theory, and psychohistory Lectures and seminars in large departmental introductory course in psychiatry at Yale, and in additional courses planned by others l

Lectures on traumatic syndrome and issues around death and death symbolism in board-preparation and extension courses at Yale Seminars and tutorials with Yale undergraduates and graduate students, including advisory role on undergraduate and medical theses and on dissertations 1963-1975 Led faculty seminars and working groups at Yale on research on psychology and history, and psychiatric theory 1981- Participation as lecturer and workshop leader in Cambridge Hospital--Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

--continuing education programs on psychotherapy, nuclear threat, suicide, and psychiatric change

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BIBLIOGRAPHY h

Cooks

1. Lifton RJ.

Thought reform and the psychology of totalism; a study of " brainwashing" in China. New York:

Norton Library Edition, 1963, reissued 1969. W. W. Norton, 1961.

2. Lifton RJ. Death in life: survivors of Hiroshima.

Random House, 1968; Vintage Books, 1969. New York:

Books, 1976. Reissued by Touchstone

3. Lifton RJ. Revolutionary immortality: Mao Tse-tung and the Chinese cultural Books, 1968.

revolution. New York: Random House, Vintage Reissued by W. W. Norton, 1961.

4. Lifton RJ. Birds. New York: Random House, 1969. (Humorous cartoons)
5. Lifton RJ. Boundaries: psychological man in revolution.

Random House, Vintage Books, 1970. New York:

6. Lifton RJ. History and human survival: essays on the young and theold,survivorsandthedead,peaceandwar,andoncontemporaryg psychohistory. New York: Random House, 1970; Vintage Books, 1971.
7. Lifton RJ. Home from the war:

nor executioners. New York: Simon Vietnam veterans--neither victims 1973. & Schuster, Touchstone Books,

8. Lifton RJ, Olson, E. Living and Dying. New York: Praeger, 1974.
9. Lifton RJ. The life of the self: toward a new psychology.

Simon & Schuster, Touchstone Books, 1976. New York:

10. Lifton RJ. PsychoBirds. Taftsville, Vermont:

1978. Countryman Press, (Humorous cartoons)

11. Lifton RJ, Kato S, Reich M.

modern Japan. New Haven:

Six lives /six deaths: portraits from Yale University Press, 1979.

12. Lifton RJ. The broken connection: on death and the continuity of life. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979; Touchstone Books, 1980.
13. Lifton RJ, Falk, RA. Indefensible weapons.

1982. New York: Basic Books, l

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! 14. Lifton RJ. The woman in America. Boston: lloughton Mifflin, 1965; Beacon Press, 1966.

15. Lifton RJ. America and the Asian revolutions. Rutgers: Trans-action Books, 1966.
16. Lifton RJ, Falk RA, Folko G. Crimes of war. New York: Random House, Vintage Books, 1971.
17. Lifton RJ, Olson E. Explorations in psychohistory: the Wellfleet J papers. New York: Simon 6 Schuster, Touchstone Books, 1975.
18. Lifton RJ, Chivian E, Chivian S, Mack JE, eds. Last aid: medical I dimensions of nuclear war. Redding, CT: Freeman Press, 1982.

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Original Reports ~

1. Lifton RJ.

April 1953. Psychotherapy with combat fliers. Armed Forces Med J.

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2. Lifton RJ. Home by ship:

of war repatriated ' om North reaction Korea.patterns of American prisoners 110:732-739. Am J Psychiatry. 1954;

3. Lifton RJ. Chinese communist thought reform. In: Schaffner B, ed. Group processes:

transactions York: Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation. of the third conference. New 1956;7-10.

4. Lifton RJ. ' Thought reform' of western civilians in ChirCse communist prisons. Psychiatry. 1956; 19:173-195.
5. Lifton RJ. Thought reform of Chinese intellectuals: a psychiatric evaluation. J Asian Stud. 1956; XVI:75-88.
6. Lifton RJ. Chinese's communist thought reform: the assault upon identity and belief. Washington, D.C. Research report, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. May 1957.
7. Lifton RJ. Leadership under stress. (Symposium on preventive and social psychiatry. Washington, D.C. Walter Reed Army Institute of Research--National Research Council. April 15-17, 1957.
8. Lifton RJ. Psychiatric aspects of Chinese communist thought reform. In:

No. 4, July 1957. Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry, Symposium

9. Lifton RJ. Japanese youth: the Am. Scholar. 1961; 31:332-334.

search for the new and the pure.

10. Lifton RJ. Youth and history: individual change in postwar Japan.

J Am Ac3d Arts Sci. 1962; 91:172-197

11. Lifton RJ. Psychological effects of the atomic bomb in Hiroshima:

the theme of death. Daedalus, J Am Acad Arts Sci. 1963; 92:462-497.

12. Lifton RJ. On death and death symbolism: the Hiroshima disaster.

Psychiatry: J Stud Interper Proc. 1964: 27:191-210.

13. Lifton RJ.

Japanese youth.

Individual patterns in historical change: imagery of Disord Commun: Asso Res Nerv Men Dis. 1964:

291-306.

XLII:

14. Lifton RJ. Womas as knower:

In: Lifton RJ, ed.

some psychohistorical perspectives.

Mifflin, 1965:27-51.

The Woman in America. Boston: Houghton O

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15. Lifton RJ. Mao Tse-tung and the ' death of the revolution'.

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Trans-action. Sept. 1968; 6-13, 50-54.

16. Lifton RJ. The young and the old: notes on a new history.

Atlantic Monthly. Sept./Oct. 1969.

17. Lifton RJ. On psychohistory. Partisan Rev. Spring 1970; 11-32.
18. Lifton RJ. Protean man. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1971; 24:298-304.
19. Lifton RJ. Prophetic survivors: Hiroshima and beyond. Soc Pol.

Jan./Feb. 1972; 8-15.

20. Lifton RJ. Experiments in advocacy research. In: Masserman JH, ed. Research and relevance, XXI, Science and psychoanalysis.

New York: Grune & Stratton. 1972; 259-271.

21. Lifton RJ. Thought reform: the cultural perspectives. In:

Wei Y., ed. Communist China: a system-functional reader.

Columbus: Charles E. Merrill, 1972:163-173.

22. Lifton RJ. Home from the war: the psychology of survival.

Atlantic Monthly, Nov. 1972; 56-72.

23. Lifton RJ. Psychological man in revolution:. the struggle for communal resymbolization. In: Coelho GV, Rubenstein EA, eds.

Social change and human behavior: mental health challenges of the seventies. Bathesda: NIMH, 1972:69-88.

24. Lifton RJ. Survivor as creator. Am Poet Rev. 1973; 2:40-42.
25. Lifton RJ. The struggle for cultural rebirth. Harper's Mag.

April 1973; 84-90.

26. Lifton RJ. Transformationa: a psychocultural perspective. In:

Shimahara N, ed. Educational reconstruction: promise and challenge.

New York: Merrill, 1973.

27. Lifton RJ. The symbolism of death. In: Proceedings of Galway Conference of Irish Psychiatric Association. Dublin. 1973.
28. Lifton RJ. The sense of immortality: on death and the continuity of life. Am J Psychoana. 1973; 33:3-15.
29. Lifton RJ. D,eath imprints. J. Clin Child Psychol. Summer 1974; 47-49,
30. Lifton RJ. Death, survival and continuity of life.- In: Cullen JH, ed. Experiential behaviour: a basis for the study of mental disturbance. Irish Univ Press, 1974:395-403.

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l Reviews .

() 1. Lifton RJ, Muramatsu T, Doi T. Letter from Japan. Am J Psychiatry.

1954; 110:641-643. (A brief description and historical summary of Japanese psychiatry.)

2. Lifton RJ. ' Brainwashing' in perspective. New Republic. May 13, 1957. (Special supplement on Communist China. )
3. Lifton RJ. Review of Rickett A, Rickett A. Prisoners of liberation. Am J Psychiatry. 1958; 115-262-3.
4. Lifton RJ. Reason, rearmament and peace: Japan's struggles with a universal dilemma. Asian Survey. Jan. 1962.

5, Lifton RJ. Who is more dry: heroes of Japanese youth. New Republic. 1962: 147-12-14.

6. Lifton RJ. Anxiety and public awareness. Council for Correspond-ence Newsletter. 1963; 25:8-9.
7. Lifton RJ. Comments on three studies. Council for Correspondence Newsletter. 1963; 24:45-56
8. Lifton RJ. Review of Osada. A. Children of the A-bomb. New York Review of Books. Feb. 1963.

() 9. Lifton RJ. Review essay, Mazlish B, ed.. Psychoanalysis and history. History and theory, 1965; IV:353-358.

10. Lifton RJ. On psychology and history: further comment.

Comp Stud Soc Hist. 1965; VII: 127-132.

11. Lifton RJ. Review of Kobler AL, Stotland E. The end of hope:

a social-clinical theory of suicide. Arch Gen Psychiatry.

1965; 12:192-194.

12. Lifton RJ. America in Vietnam--the circle of deception.

, Trans-action. 1968; 5:10-19.

13. Lifton RJ. When we dead awaken., Partisan Rev. Summer 1968; 475-483. (Review essay on Steiner J-F. Treblinka.)
14. Lifton RJ. Death in life: a statement. Bull Atomic Sci.

J u n e 1 9 6 9 ; '3 9 . (National Book Award acceptance speech.)

15. Lifton RJ. Van Wyck Brooks Award acceptance statement for Death in Life. Univ. of bridgeport Quart. 1969; III:15-17.

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16. Lifton RJ. Moon and mind. New York Times, Aug. 1969. '
17. Lifton RJ.

weapons.

Absurdity and common sense: coping with nuclear Sat Rev. Aug. 30, 1969; 19-21, 30-32. lll

18. Lifton RJ. Vietnam: betrayal and self-betrayal.

Oct. 1969; 6-7. Trans-action.

19. Lifton RJ. Why civilians are war victims.

News and World Report. Interview with U.S.

Dec. 15, 1969; 25-28.

20. Lifton RJ. The scars of Vietnam. (Testimony before U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Veterans' Affairs, chaired by Senator Alan Cranston, Jan. 27, 1970.) Commonweal. 1970; XCI:554-556.
21. Lifton RJ. My Lai and the malignant spiral. (Statement for Congressional Conference on War and National Responsibility, Feb. 20-21, 1970.) Viking Press volume on Conference Proceedings.
22. Lifton RJ. On spiritual innovators: Erikson and Gandhi.

Psychiatry Soc Sci Rev. 1970; 4:3-7.

23. Lifton RJ. False God. Atlantic Monthly. Oct. 1970; 104-110.
24. Lifton RJ. The politics of immortality. Psychol Today.

1970; 70-73. Nov.

25. Lifton RJ. Existential evil.- In: Sanford N, Comstock C, eds, Sanctions for evil. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1971. llh
26. Lifton RJ. Beyond atrocity. Sat Rev. March 27, 1971; 23-25, 54.
27. Lifton RJ. Violence, guilt and the Vietnam veteran.

1971; 31:5-6. Fellowship.

28. Lifton RJ. Interview on amnesty. In: Polner M, ed. When can I come home? a debate on amnesty for exiles, antiwar prisonerr and j others. New York: Doubledhy-Anchor, 1972:46-59.

! 29. Lifton RJ. The burden of survival. Event. April 1972; 16-20.

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30. Lifton RJ. Women's attitudes toward their roles. Interview in Family Circle. July 1972; 12, 94, 96.
31. Lifton RJ. Vibtnam and the psychology of war. The Listener.

1972; 88:269-272.

l 32. Lifton RJ. The ' gook syndrome' and ' numbed warfare'.

Nov. 1972 Sat Rev/ Soc.

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33. Lifton RJ. Questions of guilt. Partisan Rev. Fall 1972) 514-530.

() 34. Lifton RJ.

York Times Book Rev.

Review of Langer WC. The mind of Adolf Hitler.

Dec. 13, 1972; 2-3, 16.

New

35. Lifton RJ. It isn't peace, and there's no honor. Am Report.

1973; III, No. 13.

36. Lifton RJ. Heroes and victims. New York Times Op-Ed Column.

Mar. 28, 1973; 47.

37. Lifton RJ. The POWS come home. Compton Yearbook. Chicago:

Encyclopedia Britannica, 1974:131-133.

38. Lifton RJ. The limits of growth. Interview in: Oltmans WL, ed.

On growth: the crisis of exploding population and resource depletion. New York: Putnam's, 1974:144-152.

39. Lifton RJ. Preface to Mitscherlich A, Mitscherlich M. The inability'to mourn. New York: Grove Press, 1975:vii-xiii.
40. Lifton RJ. Depression: surviving our troubled times. Interview in Med. Opinion, May 1975; 34-39.
41. Lifton RJ. We who stand at the border of life and death. Interview in Prism Mag. 1975; 3:46-49, 53-54.

() 42. Lifton RJ. Carriers of the nuclear disease.

Column, June 18, 1975.

New York Times Op-Ed

43. Lifton RJ. We are all survivors. Radio Times (London). Aug. 2-8, 1975; 7-11.
44. Lifton RJ. Review of Morris I. The nobility of failure. New York:

Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1975.

45. Lifton RJ. Review of Becker E. Escape from evil. New York Times l Book Rev. Jan. 16, 1975
46. Lifton RJ. On the Hearst trial. New York Times. Apr. 16, 1976.
47. Lifton RJ. Review essay of Blum H. Wanted: the search for Nazis in America. New York: Quadrangle, 1977. New York Times Book Rev.

Jan. 16, 19,77, 6-8.

48. Lifton RJ. Some thoughts on survivors. The Jewish Soc Work Forum.

1978; 14:6-10.

49. Lifton RJ. Death, war, and the human condition. Courses by news-paper (syndicated article). California. Spring 1979.

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R Poeataoco O 43comww weugwos%52 moo L Department of Respiratory Herapy I GEORGE R. SMOHL. JR.

PRESOENT May 26, 1982 -

Dr. Robert Holt 6 Washington Place New York, NY 10003 ,

Dear Dr. Holt:

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In reference to our telephone conversation cn May 20, 1982, please note that I have enclosed the following statenents:

Training:

I am a Registered Respiratory h erapist (R.R.T.) and currently serve as Director of R&piratory Werapy at the above institution. I also serve as Adjunct Faculty, Allied Health, Harrisburg Area Cemamity College.

I mceivrvi my diplcma in Respiratory Herapy frun the Advanced Respiratory Herapy Pmgram at the University of Chicago Hospitals and Clinics. I hold an Associate in letters, Arts, and Science fzun Penn State University and a Bachelor of Arts in Health Care and Acininistration frcm Ottawa University.

During the BfI incident, I was inside the 10 mile risk zone and had the opportunity to observe disaster response and the pmparation of crash plans

( for novcment of institutionalized patient.s. Following the incident, I studied the response of the four closest pitals and published my finriingm in the American Journal of Public Healtg. Bis paper was acccupanied by an editorial by Gordon K. MacLeod, M.D., Pennsylvania Secmtary of Health, during the3 incident. OgherreferencesofinterestincludepapersbySmith and Fisher , and DeMuth . Both of these references support my recent I publication.

I would be prepared to conment on hospital disaster preparedness before and after nII, and could make broad suggestions for future planning.

Please contact me as far in advance as possible in regards to your request for testimony in this matter.

Sincere y,  ;

i Chris Maxwell, B.A.,JR.R.T.

Director, Respiratory W erapy O l.

^

- April 14, 1982 , ,

l

?-

g CURRICUIEW VITAE Christopher Ian Maxwell .

Age 31 .

~

Married; two children .

Address: -

l 628 Benton Street

  • Harrisburg, PA 17104 Fa mation:

Bachelor of Arts Health Care and AMnintration l Ottawa University j May, 1981 .

Associate in Istters, Arts and Science h e Pennsylvania State University

. August, 1975 Professional Education:

Febntary, 1978 Advanced Respiratory B erapy Pr w au.

%e University of 011cago Hospitals and Clinics Diplcuna in Respiratory herapy 1

Post-Graduate Fa ration:

Intensive Review Program in Respiratory B erapy -

Georgia State University I Atlanta, Georgia  ;

September, 1978 I

Respiratory herapy Course XVIII Tufts University School of Medicine ,

Boston, u m ,chusetts April, 1979 ,

III World Congress on Intensive and Critical Care Medicine l.

Washington D.C.

May, 1981 Professional Credentials:

Registered Respiratozy %erapist (RRT)  !

he National Board for Respiratory 2erapy 1979 Registry #7234

_ __ ~ ~ . . . _ - __ . .__ _ -

3

3 ..

{ i,

-1 (Profaaminnal Credentials continued)

I Certified Respiratory 'Iherapy Technician (CRrr)

'Ibe National Board for Respiratory 'Iberapy l.

, 1975 ->

J B eloyment: i i Director .

l Department of Hospiratory Therapy n==mity emwral Osteopathic Hospital 4300 Ynn* '- y Road, Box 3000 -

Harrisburg, PA 17105 November, 1978 - present l

Professional Societies:

uan*=v, American Association for Respiratory 'Iberapy j Member, Society of Critical Care Medicine 1

Professional Activities:

~

j Chainnan 1981, 1982

) Capital 1%v'ational District Pennsylvania State Society American Association for Respiratory 'Iberapy Judicial Comnittee 1981 .

i Pennsylvania State Society AART '

J Vice-President 1980 '

Central Pennsylvania Chapter -

American Association for Respiratory 'Iberapy j Chaiznan 1981, 1982 ,

l Advisory Comnittee j Respiratory 'Iberapy Prw-1 Harrisburg Area nummity College 1 3300 remaron Street Ibad l Harrisburg, PA 17110 Adjunct Faculty - Allied Health l 1979 - present Harrisburg Area Cmmunity College

. 3300 Cameron Street Road Harrisburg, PA 17110 Cna=Htant l ChesTech Corporation

  • 150 Allendale Road
King of Prussia, PA 19406 i

e

, . . , . . . . _ _ ,. .,,-,_-,-_--..m,,,,-. _ ., , _-. .~ ..,,., ., ,. . . . , __ ,. , . _ _r-, , -_,_., , , , _ _ - - -_ _,- - . _,_._ ,

s e

i References t;

p. .
1. Maxwell C. Hospital organizaticnal response to the nuclear accident .

at 'Ihree Mile Island: Inplications for future-oriented disaster  !

planning. An J Public Health 1982;72:275-279. l-

2. MacImod GK. A mle for public health in the nuclear age.

An J Public Health 1982;72:237-239.

3. Snith JS, Fisher JH. 'Ihree Mile Island: The silent disaster. JAMA 1981; 245:1656-1659.
4. DeMuth WE, Trautlein JJ. The luck of 'Ihree Mile Island. J of Trauma 1979;19:792-794.  ;

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2 l

4 l It?

i Publications:  :

Maxwell C, Goodrich CC. A modification of the Bennett MA-1 ventilator to pendt onW flow and exhaled voltane monitoring during continuous

, flow IM7 with PEEP. Respir-Care 1980;25:941-943 Maxwell C, Goodrich CC. Further infonaation cm continuous flow exhaust valve. (Ietter). Respir Care 1981;26:269 Maxwell C. Hospital organintional response to the nuclear accident at

'Ihree Mile Island: Inclications for future-oriented disaster pinnnimr.

An J Public Health 1982;72:275-279 Maxwell C. Simnary: Hospital response 'IMI. Federal Bnergency .

Managenent Agency National Newsletter 1982. In press.

Maxwell C. Monitoring mavimal expiratory pOO2. (Istter). Respir Care.

In press.

Interview and Stanary. Hospital response at 'IMI. Critical Mass Energy C Journal 1982:7;3 l

l i

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r j

j .- , ,

g Boston University Collegeof Liberal Arts96-100 Cummmaton Street Itoston, Massacliuset ts 02215 Department of Smiology l 3 June 1982 4

?

l Amanda Potterfield, Esq.

! NYPIltG, Inc.

9 Murray Street

. - liew York,Ilew York 10007 1

Dear Ms. Potterfield,

This is to inform you that I will appear to testify in July j concerning the erroneous assumptions about responses of the public l- and of utility employees contained in the emergency plans for the l- Indian Point power plant.

I I will be submittini; filial written testimony by June lh,1982.

l Sincerely, ,

i w L.{' ~,

lf Wp.

l

.s Murray Melbin Professor g

esw-vm.m-+- *ye-+~,---ce.-**--yw-%r-v-*-rw, me+--,,- - , - - . - - - + . -womeww es e-, - + - - , .--*e+= - - --+--_ 4-+-w = - - - + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - J

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MURBAI MELEIN - YHA 1137 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02138 Born 26 September 1927 (617) h92-1616 Professor of Sociology Present position: Easton University (617) 353-2597 Boston, MA 02215 EDUCATION 19h7-h8 City College of New York - Liberal Arts 19h8-51 New York Univert:ity B.A. (1951) Batailing, Speech, Psychology 1951-53 Cornell Univers;ty M.s . (195h) Industrial and Labor Relations 1955-59. University of Michigan Ph.D. (1959) Social Psychology O [ Dissertation title: " Bureaucratic Process, Personal Needs, and Turnover Among Psychiatric Aides"]

MAnM(IC POSUIONS 195h: Extramural Imeturer, Ibadan University, Nigeria (Spring); and Makersre College, Uganda (Fall).

1960-61: Instructor in Social Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School.

1961-65: Lecturer on Social Relations, Department of Social Relations, Harvard University.

1962,63: Visiting Professor, and Grant Foundation Fellow, University of Colorado (sumaners).

1969-current: Professor of Sociology, Boston University.

1975-76: Visiting Professor, Social' Research Unit - Bedfo'rd College, University of London.

HONORS 1950: New York State Scholarship (undergraduate, competitive).

1951: National honorary societies for Retailing and Public Speaking (undergraduate).

1955: University Fenowship, University of Michigan -- Ann Arbor (graduate) 1959,60: Russell Sage Foundation Residency Fellowships (postdoctoral) 1978: Socio-Psychological Pri::e -- American Association for the Advancement of Science (for " Night as Frontier")

. s 0

2 PUBLICATIONS AND CONTRACTED REPmTS 1953 "The Action-Interaction Chart as a Research Tool" Human Organization v.12, n.1:3h-35.

195h "An Interaction Recording Device for Participant Observers" Human Organization v.13. n.2:29-33, 1960 " Turnover Among Psychiatric Aides" (Replication of dissertation research, con-tracted report to McLean Hospital about that hospital. 11pp.)

1960 "Maoping Uses and Methods" in '. dams, R.N. and Preiss, J.J. (eds) HUMAN EGANI-ZATION RESEARCH Honewood, IL: Dorsey Press: 255-266.

1961 " Organization Practice and Individual Behavior: Absenteeism Among Psychiatric Aides" American Sociological Review v.26, n.1:lh-23.

1961 " Personal Consequences of Mental Hospital Organization" in DESIGNING THE SOCIAL SISTEM OF A PSTCHIATRIC TEACHING HWPITAL Atlanta Georgia Department of Health, Department of Psychiatry, anory University, and Regional Office IV of Comnunity Services Branch of National Institute of Mental Health: 76-105.

1963 "Exoloding the Myth of the Psychiatric Aide: Research on who takes the job and his role cerformance' in Levy, J. and Hunter, R.M. (eds) DIALOGUES:

APPROACHES TO SELECTED MENTAL HEALTH PRSLE)6 Boulder, Colo.: Western Interstate Comission for Higher Education: 1-25.

1963 " Realistic Administration of a Psychiatric Aide Program" in Invy, J. and Hun-t ter, R.M. (eds) DIAIDOUES: APPROACHES TO SELEX7IED MENTAL HEALTH PRWLE!6 l Boulder, Colo.: Western Insterstate Commission for Higher Education: 27-51.

l 196h with Nathan Gould " Formal Structure and Rational Organization Theory" Human Organization v.23, n.h: 305-311.

1966 And Doris Taub "The High Cost of Replacing a Nurse" Hosoitals v.h0, 16 Oc-tober: 112-122.

, 1969 " Behavior Rtgrthms in Mental Hospitals" American Journal of Sociology v.7h, I n.6: 650-665.

-Condensed in Mental Health Digest v.1, n.10,1969.

-Reorinted in Emerick, R. (ed) ON MADNESS Dickinson Pub. Co.

-Reorinted in Rossi, J.J. and Filstead, W.J. (eds) THERAPEUTIC COM-MUNITY, 1975.

  • Reprinted in Warner Modular Publicatiens series (#R-6hl).

1970 "An Interaction Recording Device for Participant Observers" in Simon, A. and Boyer, E.G. (eds) MIRRORS FUt BEHAVI m Phila.: Research For Better Schools, v.ll: 57-1 to 57-13 (ny 195h article, slightly revised).

g 1972 ALOUE AND WITH OTHERS: A GRAMMAR OF INTERPERSONAL BEHAVIOR New York: Harper and Row.

s .,

O 3

PUBLICATIGIS AND CONTBACTED REPoltfS (continued) v.I, n.3: 293-30h.

197h " Sane Issues in Nonverbal Communication" Semiotica 1976 " Organizational Alternatives for Professionals and Volunteers (Contracted report to Mental Health Study Center, NDE, IEDF. Washington, D.C. 65 pp.)

1978 " Night As Frontier" haerican Sociological Review v.h3,n.1: 3-22.

-Awarded Socio-Psychological Prize for 1978, American Association for the Advancement of Science.

-Reprinted in Coser, L. (ed) THE PLEASUHl!S OF SOCI0IDGI 1980.

-Reprinted in Robertson, I. (ed) SOCI0IDGI (Reader) 1981.

-Reprinted in Ginn Custom Publishing Program,1981.

1978 "The Colonization of Time" in Carlatein, T., Parkes, D. and Thrift, N. (eds)

TIMING SPACE AND SPACDiG T3ME. II. Human Activity and Time Geography.

London: Edward Arnold, 100-113.

1978 " City Rhythms" in Fraser, J.T., Lawrence, N., and Park, D. (eds) M E STUDI 0F TIME. III. New Tork: Springer-Verlag, hhh-h65 1979 " Settling the Frontier of Night" in Psychology Today v.1h, n.1: h0-52 ff.

h981 " Colonizing the Night" in New Society (London) v.56, WORK IN PROGRESS

-book manuscript: NIDHT AS FIONTIER PRESENTATIONS AT CONVENTIONS 1965 " Quantity and Quality" American Sociological Association, Chicago.

1971 "The Incessant Community" Eastern Sociological Society, New York.

1975 "The Culture of the Night" British Sociological Society, York (U.K.).

1976 " City Rhythms" International Society for the Study of Time, Alpbach (Austria).

1978 "What we can learn from Te= poral Ecology" International Sociological Association - Ninth World Congress, Uppsala (Sweden).

1980 Social Welfare Panel (invited discussant) - President's Camission for a National Agenda for the Eighties John F. Kennedy Center, Boston, Mai...

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t k

MEIA INTER 7IM/REPORIS ABOUT OW BESEARCH Newspapers - Boston Globe 28 May 1975; also 15 June 1979 and magazines

- Boston Magazine June 1977; also November 1980

- Knickerbocker News (Albany, NY) 22 July 1978

- uno ans uno (National Council for Science and Technology, Marico City) & January 1979

- Newsweek h June 1979

- Kansas City Star 9 September 1979

- Fortune Magazine 15 December 1980

- Technical Survey (Cleveland, E ) 2h January 1981 O

Radio and TV: " Tom Larson Show" (Public Affairs) Ch.38, Boston, 17 July 1979

- Newsweek feed service tape series: interview / documentary for nationwide television Ih October 1979 "MacNeil-Lehrer Report" (Public television) nationwide, 2h December 1979

" Morning Editionn (Public Radio) nationwide February 1980

" News in the Behavioral Sciences" (Public Radio) New Orleans, j November 1980 1

"TODAY Show" (NBC television) nationwide 16 April 1981 l "Newsmark" (CBS Radio) nationwide 30 May 1981 i

e O

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O' .

5 MDiRNERTP IN PBCFESSINAL SOCIEFIES 1558-current: American Sociological Association 1959-current: American Association for the Aarancement of Science (Life member since 1%2) 1975-current: International Society for the Study of Time Listed in: American Men and Women of Science Contemporary Anthors Dictionary of International BioCraphy -

'40'S 1510 in America OTHER PB0FESSIONAL APPOINTMDrIS j 1959-61 Russell Sage Besidency Fellow, McLean Hospital and Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School l; 1959-66 Assistant Social Scientist, Mr4m Hospital (Belmont, Mass.)

1961-69 Research Associate, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School 1962-6h Tutor (member of) Winthrop House, Harvard College 1966-69 Assistant Sociologist, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mass.

1970-73 Co-Director, Health Services Research Training Program, Boston Univ.

1976-78 Director of Graduate Programs--Sociology, Boston University 1977-81 Associate Editor, American Sociological Baview, American Sociological Assn.

REFEREE, REVIE'AR, OUTSIDE EVAIRATOR 1

Research proposals: National Science Foundation Tenure reviews: Brandeis University, University of Colorado, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Book reviews: American Journal of Sociology, Contemporary Sociology, Social Science and Medicine, Environment and Planning Articles: American Journal of Sociology, American Sociological Review, American Sociologist, Social Forces Book manuscripts: Harper and Row, Human Sciences Press, John Wiley & Sons, M.I.T. Press.

RESEARG INTERESTS

-Timing of br.an behavior, 2h-hour social systems, adaptation to shift work.

-Organizations' response to outside challenges, individuals in organizations.

-Interpersonal behavior, social interaction.

COURSE 3 AND SEM2NAES TAUGT

-Research Met. hods (Grad. & Undergrad) -Studies in Human Time

-Courses and research seminars -Introduction to Social Relations on Organications (Psychol., Sociol., Anthropol.)

-Social Interaction, Symbolic Interaction -Medical Sociology

-Theory Construction -Seminar on Freud and Darwin s

1 l

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l 6

INVITED TAIXS (Colloquium = only sneaker; Conference - other speakers on program) 1960 Conference. Metropolitan State Hospital, Waltham, MA. "Research on psychiatric aides."

1961 Conference. Georgia Department of Public Health, Atlanta. " Planning the social strccture of a psychiatric hospital."

1962 Conference. Western Interstate Comission en Higher Education, Pueblo, Colorado.

"Research on psychiatric aides-processes of occupational choice."

1963 Conference. Western Interstate commission cm Higher Education, Denver, Colorado.

"Research en psychiatric aides-role performance." (Two lectures) 1963 Colloquium. Bureau of Applied Research, Columbia University. " Issues in the study of interpersonal behavior."

1965 Colloquium. Deoartment of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania. " Issues in the study of interpersonal behavior."

l966 Conoquium. Department of Health, State of New Jersey, Bordentown Training Center. "Research on the role of psychiatric aide."

1966 Colloquium. Department of Industrial Management, Sloan School of Managanent, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "An administrative field experiment en absenteeism and turnover."

1967 Conoquium. Department of Behavioral Science, Harvard School of Public Health.

_ "A behavior tables for describing role perfomance."

1967 Conoquia. Veterans Administration Hospital, Bedford, MA. "Research on psychi-atric aides." (Three lectures) g 1968 Conoquium. Division of Social Psychiatry, Massachusetts Mental Health Center, Brookline, MA. "An administrative field expeJnent on absenteeism and turnover."

1968 Colloquium. Department of Behavioral Science, Harvard School of Public Health.

" Uncertainty breeds withdrawal: a hypothesis about turnover in incessant organizations . "

1969 Colloquium. Department of Mental Health, State of Massachusetts, Bosten.

"A hospital field experiment on absentee 1sm and turnover."

1969 Conoquium. Denartment of Sociology, and School of Nursing Boston University.

"A field experiment en absenteeism arx! turnover among nursing personnel."

1969 Conoquium. Department of Sociology, Brown University, Providence, R.I. "A l hospital field experiment on absenteeism and turnover."

l 1969 Conoquium. Department of Sociology, Northeastern University, Boston, MA.

l " Issues and methods in the study of socialization."

1969 Colloquium. Department of Sociology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J.

l " Role performance as a population of acts."

1970 Conference. School of Theology, Boston University. " Methodology in social science."

1975 Colloquium. Department of Sociology, Bedford Conege, University of London.

" Time Territoriality" l

1976 Conoquium. Department of Psychology, Londen School of Economics. " Helpfulness and friendliness around the clock."

! 1977. Conoquium. School of Public Health, Boston University. "A hospital experiment l 78,79 on absenteeism and turnover."

i 1980 Conoquium. Center for Applied Social Science, Boston University. "How to change organizations."

g j

1980 Colloquium. "The 2h-Hour Urban Scene" Joint Center for Urban Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

W

4 s .

O' GRANTS RSCEIVED (Principal Investigator in all except Co-Di. rector in 1970)

National Science 1960 " Dimensions and Correlates of Role Performance" Foundation (#G-10919) $10,000.

[ Description and measuranent of interpersonal behavior.]

National Institute 1961- " Interaction of Personality and Social Structure" Mental Health 1962 (#M-5702-A) 43,500.

[ Description and measurement of interpersonal behaviorscontinued.]

National Institute 1963- " Controlled Assignment of Nursing Personnel" of Mental Health 1966 (#ME-1305) $105,000.

- [At ' Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, an experiment on shift woric schedules, absenteeism, and turnover.]

National Institutes 1%7- " Controlled Uncertainty for Nursing Personnel" of Health 1969 (#B02-NU-00251) $70,500.

[ Experiment (see preceding) continued.]

Nat 1970- " Sociology and Health Services Research Training O nional 1th sCenter

=vice =for-search and Development 1975 >= sr " (eas-ooo39) *656 ooo-

[ Graduate student training program.]

Center for Studies of 1973- "The Incessant Cn=rnunitya Metropolitan Problems 1975 (#1-RO-1-E-22763) $83,290.

(NIMH) [ Twenty-fcur hour activity in cities.]

Center for Studies of 1976 [ Supplementary grant fce Incessant Community Metropolitan Problems research project (see preceding).] $2,511.

Center for Studies of 1977- "The City as a System in 2h-Hour Time" Metropolitan Problems 1982 (#M-22763-03A1) [two grants =] $123,h20.

[ Incessant Community project - continued.]

i a

CONSULTATIONS 1960 Metropolitan State Hospital, Waltham, MA 1960 McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA 1961 Georgia Department of Health, Atlanta p 1961 Massachusetts Department of Health, Boston i

V 1963 Colorado Department of Mental Health, Denver and Pueblo 1966 New Jersey Department of Health, Bordentown 1967 U.S. Veterans Administration Hospital, Bedford, MA 1975 Mental Health Study Center, U.S. Dept. of Health, Education, & Welfare, Wash.D.C.

1979 Center for English Language and Orientation Progra=s, Boston University 1981 Mobil Research and Development Corp., Princeton, NJ

Q'

EAR M mestem union Telegram l vv T I A 139 (1410 )( 4-03 5925S 154 )PD 06/03/82 1411 l ICS IPMMTZZ CSP l 2125594160 NL TDMT NEV YOR K NY 39 06-03 0211P EST PMS AM AtO A POTTERFIELD RPT DLY MGM , D LR NYPIRG 9 MURRAY ST ,

NEW YOR K tif 10007 NEW YOR K STA T E P ARENTS OF HEARI NG IMP AIRED CHILDREN NYSPHIC C0 tCERNED ABO UT EM ERG ENCY R ESP 0 TEE PL A N FOR I tOI AN POI NT. VILLI NG TO TESTIFY ON AD EQU ACY O F PL A N I N R ESPECT TO H E ARI NG I MP AIR ED CHILDR EN O tC E V E H AV E ,

HAD A CH A NCE TO REVIEV TH E PL A N I NEZ J AtGER P AST PRESID ENT ,

399 PAR K AVE ,

l NEV YOR K NY 10043 uNNN

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, f NEW YORK UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER -

A pnvate unevenoty an the pubin servu e Institute Of Environmental Medicine 550 flRST AVINUE. NEW YORK N Y.10016 ARE A 212140-7300, Ist. 885-5211 or ARI A 914151-23%

ANTHONY ). LANZA Rf 5( AROI L ABORATORIES Af UNIVf RSITY VALLEY LONG ME ADOW ROAD. ST(RLING f ORE 5T, TUREDO,N.Y.10967 Mall AND TELEPHONE ADDRESS: 550 flRST AVINUf,NEW YORK,N.Y.10016 June 3, 1982 Ms. Amanda Potterfield 9 Murray Street New York, N.Y. 10007

Dear Ms. Potterfield:

In accordance to telephone conversations with Dr. Holt, I will appear before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on July 6 or July 7

'o present evidence on the medical consequences of estimated ladiation exposures consequent to postulated accidents at the Indian Point Nuclear Power Facility.

O I will submit my written testimony by June 21, 1982.

Sincerely yours, Ro. Albert, M.D.

Pro essor and Deputy Director REA/mb L.)

M kwm

. . MONTEFIOHE IIOSPITAL AND MEDICAL CENTER ALBERT EINSTEIN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE BRONX, NEW YORK O

VICTOR W. SIDEI., M.D. Mailing Adress-4:n.irmen, IJepartmene of .s.cral .lledicine Department of Social Medicine Montr6..rc fluepital and Medical Center Montefiore llospital and Medical Center f*relessor ..) 4:emmunity lleulth 111 East 210th Street 4:hairmen. lbrtyrtment ul t:ammunity firedth g,,,,,y,,y,,ygg4gy Al rs 1 a i ge of MeJkine Telephone: (212) 9205508 June 1, 1982 Amanda Potterfield Esq.

New York Public Interest Research Group 9 Murray Street New York, New York 10007

Dear .'is. Potterfield:

As I indicated in our recent conversation, I would be happy to testify concerning my views on the mitigation of the health consequences of a nuclear accident at Indian Point through emergency planning measures. I am, however, on the point of leaving on a professional visit to China and cannot prepare testinony before I go. I will, nevertheless, attempt to pre-

. care and submit my testimony by July 15 if at all possible for

re to do so on ray return and,if so, will be available to appear for cross enmination immediately thereafter.

Sincerely, b.

WS:ew Victor W. Sidel, MD

. O "fleulsk is a state .l rom;4ete physical, mental and social u ell.being and not merely the afnence of disease or infrmity' C n-situteun of the World llcalth Organization

e ,

CURRICULUM VITAE VICTOR W. SIDEL, M.D.

Professor and Chairman Department of Social Medicine Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine 111 E. 210th Street ,

Bronx, New York 10467 Parsonal Information:

Birthdate: July 7, 1931 Birthplace: Trenton, New Jersey Wife: Ruth Sidel, MSW, PhD Children: Mark, Kevin Education: Princeton University, A.B. cum laude (physics). 1949-1953 Harvard University, M.D. with honors in a special field (biophysics) 1953-1957 London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (Combined Course in Epidemiology and Medical Statistics) 1967-1968 Jraining and Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, Mass..

Professional Intern in Medicine 1957-1958 Appointments: Junior Assistant Resident in Medicine 1958-1959 National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland Clinical Associate, National Heart Institute and Senior Assistant Surgeon, U.S. Public Health Service 1959-1961 Assistant in Medicine, George Washington University School of Medicine 1960-1961 l Peter Bent Brigham Hospital Senior Assistant Resident in Medicine 1961-1962 i Biophysical Laboratory, Harvard Medical School,

~

l Boston

( Instructor in Biophysics, Harvard University 1962-1964

[ Advanced Research Fellow, American Heart l Association 1962-1964 i Junior Associate in Medicine, Peter Bent l Brigham Hospital 1962-1966 Consulting Physician in Mcdicine (Child Health Division) and Internist, Family Health Care Program, Children's Hospital Medical Center 1963-1966 l

Member, Massachusetts Commission on Radiation l Protection 1963-1964

Macsachusetts General Hospital, Boston Chief, Preventive Medicine Unit 1964-1967'

  • Associate in Preventive Medicine, Harvard .

Medical School 1964-1967 Course in Epidemiology, National Communicable Disease Center, Atlanta, Georgia 1964 Courses in Biostatistics and in Medical Care Admin-istration, Harvard School of Public Health 1964-1965 Research Fellow, Medical Foundation 1964-1968 ,

Faculty Fellow, Milbank Memorial Fund 1964-1971 Executive Secretary, Utilization Review Committee, MGH 1967-1969 Study Year in the U.S.S.R., Great Britain, and 1967-1968 Scandinavia U.S.-U.S.S.R. Health Exchange Visitor Combined Course in Epidemiology and Medical Statis-tics, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Courses in Social Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science Research Project and Seminars, Social Research Unit, Bedford College, University of London Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 1968-1969 Chief, Community Medicine Unit Assistant Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School Member, Center for Community Health and Medical Care, Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health

~

, Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center and Albert

) Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, N.Y.

Chairman, Dept. of Social Medicine, HHMC 1969-Professor, Community Health (Social Medicine), AECOM 1969-

Consulting Physician, Department of Social Medicine, l Morrisania City Hospital 1969-1976 l

Associate, University Seminar on Social and Preventive Medicine, Columbia University 1970-l Chairperson, Ambulatory Medical Care Audit l

t Committee, MHMC 1971-Chairperson, Institutional Review Board for -

l Protection of Human Subjects, MHMC 1972-Visiting faculty member, Program in Health, Medicine i

and Society and Department of Community Health and I

Social Medicine, School of Biomedical Education, Cityf College, City University of New York 1973-Honorary Att.ending Physician, Department of Ambulatory Care, North Central Bronx Hospital 1976-l l

1 i

pyxperience h USSR International Medical care US-USSR Health Exhange Visitor Study Visit

. 1967 1978 t Great Britain, Norway, Sweden Study Year ,

Denmark 1967-1968 People's Republic of China--Invit ation of Chinese Medical Association Republic of Chile 1971,1972,1977, 1980 Chilean Ministry of Health Academy of Christian Humanism 1973 Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North 1979 Vietnam)--Representative of Medic a l Aid to Indochina 1974 Republic Ministry of of Cuba--Invitation Health of Cuban 1978 World Health Organization Consultant, Adviser (Geneva)

Consultant (Malaysia) 1969,1974,1977

- Consultant 1974 Office, Manila)(Western Pacific Regional 1974 Scandinavian (Goteborg), School Visiting of Public Health Professor Editorial Boards llospital Practice 1975,1976,1977, and Editorial 1981 Consultantships 1966-Postgraduate _ Medicine 1969-The New Physician 1971-1975 International Journal of Health S ervices Update International 1971-1979 1972-1974 American Journal of Drug and Al cohol Abuse 1973-1981 American Journal of Chinese Medicine 1975-Forum on MedicAne Physicians) (American College of 1978-1980 Journal of Prison Health: Law, Medicine, Corrections, and Ethics 1980-Journal of Latin Community Health 1980-

197D; i (Fellow, 1968-  ;

ittees, 1979-81; American PublicCouncils Member, various Healthand Associat on CommNominating Comm.,

Current Society 1978- ,

Memberships and Governing Council, 1980-81)

Fellowships Chairman, Nominating Committee, tive Medicine Association of Teachers of Preven i lon International Epidemiological Assoc as on ,

(Member, Committee New York Acadeny of Medicine 1970- )

Medicine in Society,

  • New York Academy of Sciences ility Physicians for Social ResponsibMember, National 1982- )

Advisory (Vice-Chairman 19,66-69:

Member, Board of Directors, -

Board, 1979- 1971-72; Member, Physicians Forum (Chairperson,)

Board of Directors, 1969- '

York City Public (Member, Policy Chairman, Public Health Association Board of Directors, 1979-80; of New 1979-80; President, 1981-83) '

and Legislation Comm.,

Society for Health and Human Values Media Project, Oil Advisory Board, Occupational Healthtional Union current Chemical and Atomic WorkersNational Interna Health Memberships on +

Advisory and Advisory Committee, Coalition for a

~ ~Other Boards Service Project on Low-Income Consumers, Consultant, .:

Consumers Union of the United States Bronx

[

i tion Medical Care Evaluation Subcommittee, Pro ,

Bronx Community College .

Advisory Committee, ation, d

Advisory Board, Continuing Medical E uc New York Botanical Gardens National Advisory Board, National Senior Citizens Education and Research Center Poiley Award of the New York i Recipient, Sarah L.

i Recent Honors Academy of Sciences for " Outstanding contribut h ons toward improvement in the general health of t e population" , 1978 Commencement speaker, School of Medicine, sit of California -Davis

t

  • 4 PUBLICATIONS
1. Sidel, V.W., and Solomon, A.K.: Entrance of water into human red cells under an osmotic pressure gradient. J. Gen. Physiol; 41; 243-257, 1957.
2. Sidel, V.W., Wilson, R.E., and Shipp, J.C.: Pseudocyst formation in chronic pancreatitis.. Arch. Surg. 77; 933-937, 1958. .
3. Shipp, J.C., Sidel, V.W., Donaldson, R.M. and Gray, S.J.: Serious complications of peptic ulcer after acute myocardial infarction. New Eng. J. Med. 261:

222-226, 1959.

4. Sidel, V.W.: Medical ethics and the cold war. The Nation 191: 325-327, 1960.
5. Sidel, V.W.: Confidential information and the physician. New Eng. J. Med.

264: 1133-1137, 1961. (Reprinted J. Irish Med. Assoc. 49;98-103, 1961.)

6. Sidel, V.W., Geiger, H.J., and Lown, B.: The medical consequences of thermo, nuclear war. II. The physician's role in the postattack period. New Eng.

J. Med. 266: 1137-1145, 1962.

Aronow, S., Ervin, F.R., and Sidel, V.W. (eds.): The Fallen Sky: Medical 7.

Consequences of Thermonuclear War. New York: Hill and Wang, Inc., 1963.

8. Oski, F. A. , Nathan, D.G. , Sifcl , V.W. , and Diamond, L.K. : Extreme hemolysis and red-cell distortion in erythrocyte pyruvate kinase deficiency. I.

Morphology, erythrokinetics and f amily enzyme studies. New Eng. J. Med.

270: 1023-1030, 1964.

9. Savitz, D. , Sidel, V.W. , and Solomon, A.K . : Osmotic properties of human red cells. J. Gen. Physiol. 48: 79-94, 1964.
10. Nathan, D.G., Oski, F.A., Sidel, V.W., and Diamond, L.K.: Extreme hemolysis l

and red cell distortion in erythrocyte pyruvate kinase deficiency. II.

i Measurements of erythrocyte glucose consumption, potassium flux and adenosine l triphosphate stability. New Eng. J. Med. 272: 118-123, 1965.

i i 11. Sidel, V.W. and Goldwyn, R.M.: Chemical and biologic weapons--a primer.

New Eng. J. Med. 274: 21-27, 1966.

12. Ebert, R.H. and Sidel, V.W.: Public law 89-97: Its impact on clinical teaching and clinical research. Clinical Research 14: 195-199, 1966.

I 13. Sidel, V.W. and Bonnano, R.A.: Immunization survey of personnel at the Massa-chusetts General Hospital. Hospitals, J.A.H.A. 40: 54-58, 1966.

14. Mayer, J. and Sidel, V.W.: Crop destruction in South Vietnam. The Christian Century 83_: 829-832, 1966.

Studies of erythrocyte

15. Nathan, D.G., Oski, F.A., Sidel, V.W., and Diamond, L.K.:

spicule formation in hemolytic anemia. Brit. J. Hemat. 12[: 385-395, 1966.

16. Sidel, V.W.: Medical aspects of civil def ense. pp. 53-75. In Eyring, H. , ed. ,

Civil Defense. (Publication No. 82 of the American Association fer the Advancement of Science) Washington, D. C., 1966.

i

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17. Goldwyn, R.M. and Sidel, V.W.: Chemical and biological waapons and the physician. PRE-MED ,5_: 36-47, 1966.
18. Sidel, V.V.: Book review: The Individual, Society, and Health Behavior.

Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 44,: 501-505, 1966.

19. Sidel, V.W. : Evaluation of the quality of medical practice. J. Amer.

Med. Assn. 198: 763-764, 1966.

20. Kolb, J. and Sidel, V.W.: Medicare: The end of the beginning. The Physician's Panorama 5,:. 11-16, 1967.
21. Sidel, V.W.: Book review: Conflict. in Society. Ann. Int._Med. 66: 625-626, 1967.
22. Sidel, V.W.: Editorial: Quantifying quality. Hospital Practice 2, (4): 9, 1967.
23. Janower, M.L., Sidel, V.W., and Flynn, M.J.: Follow-up study of a group of patients who received thorium dioxide for cerebral arteriography. Radiology 88,: 1004-1006, 1967.
24. Sha 'afi, R.I. , Rich, G.T. , Sidel, V.W., Bossert,. W. and Solomon, A.K. : .The effect of the unstirred layer on human red cell water permeability. J. Gen.

Physiology 50[: 1377-1399, 1967.

25. Sidel, V.W.: Our responsibility and our opportunity. Massachusetts Physician 21: 372-373, 1967.
26. Sidel, V.W., Koch-Weser, J., Barnett, G.O. , and Eaton, A. : Epidemiology of ,

drug utilization and adverse drug reactions at the Massachusetts General Hospital:

A progress report. Hospitals, J.A.H.A. 41: 80-88, 1967.

27. Reich, P. and Sidel, V.W.: Napalm. New Eng. J. Med. 277: 86-88, 1967.

- 28. Sidel, V.W. and Goldwyn, R.M.: Chemical weapons : What they are and what they do. Scientist and Citizen 9,: 141-148, 1967.

29. Janower, M.L., Sidel, V.W., and Flynn, M.J.: Preliminary report on the follow-up of patients with thorium dioxide deposits in Boston. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 145: 849-852, 1967.

l

30. Greenes, R.A. and Sidel, V.W.: The use of computer mapping in health research.

Health Services Research 2: 243-258, 1967.

31. Sidel, V.W.: The medical staff and quality of care: Techniques for assessment-Validity and limitation. Papers from the First National Congress on the Socio-Economics of Health Care. Chicago: American Medical. Association, 1967.
32. Kolb, J. and Sidel, V.W.: The influence of utilization review on hospital length of stay: Initial experience at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

J. Amer. Med. Assn. 203: 95-97, 1968.

33. Sidel, V.W.: Book review: Preventive Medicine. Ann. Int. Med. 61: 716-717, 1968.
17. Goldwyn, R.M. and Sidel, V.W.: Chemical and biological weapons and the physician. PRE-MED 5,: 36-47, 1966.
18. Sidel, V.W.: Book review: The Individual, Society, and Health Behavior.

Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 44; 501-505, 1966.

19. Sidel, V.W.: Evaluation of the quality of medical practice. J. Amer.

Med. Assn. 198: 763-764, 1966.

20. Kolb, J. and Sidel, V.W. : Medicare: The end of the beginning. The Physician's Panorama 5,: 11-16, 1967.
21. Sidel, V.W.: Book review: Conflict in Society. Ann. Int. Med. 66: 625-626, 1967.
22. Sidel, V.W.: Editorial: Quantifying quality. Hospital Practice 2, (4): 9, 1967.
23. Janower, M.L., sidel, V.W., and Flynn, M.J.: Follow-up study of a group of patients who received thorium dioxide for cerebral arteriography. Radiology 88; 1004-1006, 1967.
24. Sha 'afi, R. I. , Rich, G.T. , Sidel, V.W. , Bos s ert , W. and Solomon, A.K.: The effect of the unstirred layer on human red cell water permeability. J. Gen.

Physiology 50: 1377-1399, 1967.

25. Sidel, V.W. : Our responsibility and our opportunity. Massachusetts Physician 26,: 372-373, 1967.
26. Sidel, V.W., Koch-Weser, J., Barnett, G.O. , and Eaton, A. : Epidemiology of drug utilization and adverse drug reactions at the Massachusetts General Hospital:

A progress report. Hospitals, J.A.H.A. 41; 80-88, 1967.

27. Reich, P. and Sidel, V.W.: Napalm. New Eng. J. Med. 277: 86-88, 1967.

l-

28. Sidel, V.W. and Goldwyn, R.M.:

do.

Chemical weapons : What they are and what they Scientist and Citizen 9,: 141-148, 1967.

l

29. Janower, M.L., Sidel,.V.W., and Flynn, M.J.: Preliminary report on the follow-up l of patients with thorium dioxide deposits in Boston. Annals of the New York l Academy of Sciences 145: 849-852, 1967.

l

30. Greenes, R.A. and Sidel, V.W.: The use of computer mapping in health research.

Health Services Research 2: 243-258, 1967.

l 31. Sidel, V.W.: The medical staff and quality of care: Techniques for assessment-l Validity and limitation. Papers from the First National Congress on the Socio-Economics of Health Care. Chicago: American Medical Association, 1967.

32. Kolb, J. and Sidel, V.W.: The influence of utilization review on hospital length of stay: Initial experience at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

J. Amer. Med. Assn. 203: 95-97, 1968.

l

33. Sid'el, V.W.: Book review: Preventive Medicine. Ann. Int. Med. 68,: 716-717, 1968.

t

. 9 1

P

34. Sidel, V.W.: Research into biological warfare. Proceedings-of the Medical.

Association for Prevention of War. 7,: 6-11, 1968. .

35. Sidel V'W.: Feldshers and "feldsherism". New Eng. J. Med. 278: 934-940, 981-992, 1968. (Reprinted in Bullough, B. and Bullough, V., eds. New Directions for Nurses. New York: Springer Publishing Co., 1971)
36. Sidel, V.W. : Aesculapius and Mars. Lancet 1; 966-967, 1968.
37. Janower, M.L. , Sidel, V.W. , Baker, W.H. , Fitzpatrick, D.E.P. , Guarino, F. I. ,

and Flynn, M.J.: Late clinical and laboratory manifestations of thorotrast administration in cerebral arteriography: A follow-up study of thirty patients.

New Eng. J. Med. 279: 186-189, 1968.

38. Wittes, J. and Sidel, V.W.: A generalization of the simple capture-recapture model with applications to epidemiological research. J. Chronic Dis 21; 287-301, 1968.
39. Goldwyn, R.M. and Sidel, V.W.: _

The physician and war. pp. 325-346. In Torrey, E.F. , ed. , Ethical Issues in Medicine: The Role of the Physician in Today's Society. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1968.

40. Sidel, V.W.: Napalm. pp. 44-4 7. In Rose, S. , ed. , CBW: Chemical and Biological Warfare. London: Harrap, 1968.
41. Sidel, V.W. : Medical ethics. pp. 172-178. In Rose, S., ed., CBW: Chemical and Biological Warfare. . London: Harrap, 1968.

4 2. Liberman, R. , Gold, W. , and Sidel, V.W. : Medical ethics and the military. The New Physician 17; 299-309, 1968.

43. Sidel, V.W.: Book review: Chemical'and Biological Warfare and The Silent Wcapons.

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 25,: 33-34, January, 1969.  ;

44. Koch-Weser, J . , Sidel, V .W. , Sweet, R.H., Kanarek, P., and Eaton, A.E.: Factors determining physician reporting of adverse drug reactions: Comparison of 2,000 spontaneous reports with surveillance studies at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

New Eng. J. Med. 280: 20-26, 1969.

l

45. Lown, B. and Sidel, V.W. : Duration of hospital stay following acute myocardial infarction. Amer. J. Cardiology 23; 1-3, 1969.
46. Sidel, V.W.: The American medical profession and chemical and biological weapons.

Medical Tribune 10: (No. 64): 1, 11, August 11, 1969.

47. Sidel, V.W.: Can more physicians be attracted to ghetto practice? In Norman, J.,

ed. , Medicine in the Ghetto. New York: Appleton-Century-Crof ts, 1969.

48. Sidel, V.W., Acton, J., and Lown, B.: Models for the evaluation of pre-hospital coronary care. Amer. J. Cardiology 24: 674-688, November, 1969.

i

' -8u -

s. o 0
49. Wegman, D.C. , Schoenbaum,, S.C_. , and Sidel, V.W. : Pilot application of a

' medicine. Journal of Med,1 cal Education: 44: y

~ teaching technique in social,d ' #

~

M Mr 1017,1023, Novemb.er,

- .- .- 1969.

-  ! s. 3 - . . . _ . . . . _ , . .

166: 957-966, li

50. Sid itI V.W.:- The-feldshehithh.k!S'SR. Ann.' N.Y.'

c .

./ Deedsberi 1969. ~; - '

egL;

.t

',@udd j

m.O~y- . p . .g u e

]y' a

7 j., 4 spihk op view. dew Ipng'(, Med. 282: ~2 79-280,,1970.

,5 f. Sidel( V.W. :,,,Ediggial;' ,

n,E.G.,ianarbk Finer, D.Si , E ton,' A.E.):

. Koc esei, J. , ' Sidel; V. . e s

T Adverseieffect's of'sodiuE pcol,istimethate. "

~

857-868, June, 1970.E 'b 'M' Adfalf of: M.

Internal4; Medicine . .

@72r. 4 j n f *. . ..Community

. L;  ;

and social medicine.

Postgradu{at,eMedicine. >

53. Sidel, V.W.: Foreword:

47,: 128-129, June, 1970 . .,. , ,

, y '

54. Sidel. V.W.ged.: Sociogenic health and' disease: Welfare failure lea'ds to drug '

poisonin6 The NewiPhystilin: 19: 923-925, November, 1970. ,'

2:

h,

- 55. 3idel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: Puerto Rican culture, illness, '

i and espiritism. The.New Physician: 2_0 0  :.24-27, January, 1971. ,'

56. Sidel, R., and Sidel V.W.: Blood Giving and National Character. Revie* of l The Gif t Relationship by Richard Titmuss. Social Policy 1,: No. 6, 62-63, ,. g March-April, 1971. .- .-
57. Sidel, V.W.; ed.: Sociogenic healthJand disease: Youngster injured by train underscores issues in preventive medicine and chronic care. The New Physician:

20: 322-324, May, 1971.

58. Kindig, D. A. , and Sidel, '.'.W.  : Proposed National Health Insurance Programs:

Impact on the, Consumer. In Eilers , J. , and Moyerman, S. , ep:. , National Health '

L 1 ~ Insurance. Homewood, Illinois : Richrd D. Irwin, Inc. ,1973.'. (f =

i 59.Sidel,V.W.,$e'd.: Sociogenic healti and disease: House st(iune, ff rotiations lead to f

! 1971. f fragmented hospital care. The New P'hysician: 20: 399--402, j '

>+ . p

60. Sidel, V.W.f,[ ed. : Sociogenic healt! 'and disease: Jail for@the child who needs help. The,New Physician: 20: 537-4', August, 1971. [,Q 1 I f' d h i '

0 .' i e

l Sociogenic health and diseas'e: Attemptk fo help a 14-year-old lheroin useYL The New Physician: I :"584-586, . September,;

61.Sidel,V.W.f}"ed.:

  • t
71. f[L;i j -1 y .

In Mendelsohn, E. ,

62. Sidel, V.Wh New technologies and Y,he practice cilof medicN.

Innovation. {

Swazey , Ji gand Taviss I. , eds. '{. u' man Aspects of Biomed3 Cambridge s: HarvardUniversityj ress, 1971. S  ; ,

, M., Paris, C., Finer, ).C., Kanarek, P.: ,

i

63. Koch-Weser,M,1, Sidel, V.W. , Dexcepb lulf amethoxazole, andperofurantoin. l1 L'h --

Adverse Et Archives ofReiternal ionstoSulfisoxazole',h Medicine: 1_28j 99-404, 1971. ti i

[

q, ya qp y j .

T 6 .Q

~

64. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic h'ealth and disease: The individual, the institution and suicide. The New Physician 20: 646-649, October, 1971.
65. Sidel. V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: Asthma in a city hospital. The New Physician 20: 715-717, November, 1971.
66. Sidel, V.W., ed.: . Sociogenic health and disease: Planning for abortion services in the Bronx. The New Physician 20: 773-774, December, 1971.
67. Sidel, V.W.,.ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: Children are not for burning. The New Physician 21_: 86-88, February, 1972.
68. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: The institution as surrogate parent. The New Physician 21,: 152-153, March,1972. ,
69. Sidel, R. and Sidel, f.W. : Human Services in the People's Republic of China. Social Policy 2j 25-34, March / April,1972. (Reprinted in People's China: Social Experimentation, Politics, Entry onto the World Scene, 1966 through 1972. Edited by David Milton et,j[L. New'io rk:

Vintage Books (Random House), 1974, Pp. 178-194.) ~

70. Sidel, V.W.: The case of the truncated bar chart: Infant mortality in the U.S. The New Physician 21; 230-233, April, 1972.
71. Sidel, V.W.: Serve the people: Medical education in the People's Republic ->

of China. The New Physician 21; 284-291, May, 1972.

72. Sidel, V.W.,-ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: 19th hospitalization of -

a 27 year old patient. The New Physician- 2jL: 302-303, 322, May, 1972.  ;

,73. Sidel, V.W.: The barefoot doctors of the People's Republic of China.

New Eng. J. Med. 286: 1292-1299, June 1972.

74. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: Rickets in the South Bronx. The New Physician 2]; 364-367, June,1972. i 175. Sidel, V.W.: Medical personnel and their training. In Quinn , J.R. , e d. , e Medicine and Public Health in the People's Republic of China. DEEW Publica-tion No. (NIH) 72-67, June,1972. -

-76. Jonas , S. , O' Dwyer, E. , Zendel, J. , Sidel, V.W. : Ambulatory heroin detoxifica-tion' in municipal hospital. New York State Journal of Medicine ))) 2099-2105,

August, 1972. .

h, ~77. Sidel, V.W., ed: Sociogenic health and disease: Who is the patient? The  :

, New Physician 21:466-468, August, 1972. -

[78. Sidel, V.W.: Serve. the people: Medical care in the People's Republic of China.

Asia, Number 26: 3-30, Summer,'1972.

79. Sidel, V.W.: Some observations on the organization of health care in the People's Republic of China. International Journal of Health Services 2:

385-395, August, 1972.

1

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_ __ _ _ 1

J a . ,

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80. Sidel, V.W.: Medical Ethics and Socio-Political Change. Report of the . i Institute of Society, Ethics and the Life Scientes 2 -(Number 4):8-10, i September, 1972. (Also published as a chapter (Pp. 29-37) in, The Teaching i of Medical Ethics,R.M. Veatch et al., eds., Hastings-On-Hudson, New York:

The Hastings Center, 1973 and in Medicine, Law,;and Public Policy, N.N. Kittrie

~

et al., eds., New York: AMS Press, 1975.)

81. Mallory, G.B. , Rubenstein, L.Z. , Drosness , D.L. , Kleiner, G.J. , Sidel, V.W.
Factors responsible for delay in obtaining interruption of pregnancy.

Obstetrics and Gynecology 40: 556-562, October, 1972.

82. Sidel, V.W.: The consequences of accountability to the community. Clinical Research 20: 694-697, October,1972. (Reprinted in Medicine, Law, and Public

]'

Policy, N.N. Kittrie et al., eds., New York: AMS Press, 1975.)

t j 83. Sidel, V.W.: Jefferys, M. and Mansfield, P.J.: General practice in the London Borough of Camden. Journal of the Royal College 'of General Practitioners 22 l

(Supplement Number 3): 1-26, October, 1972.

1,

! 84. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: Resuscitation: Who makes i

the decision? The New Physician 21: 589-590,'611, October, 1972.

85. Sidel, V.W.: Primary care in the People's Republic of China. Pp.34-40 in .

1 Milbank Memorial Fund Seminar Report--Mexico City, 1972. New York: Milbank Memorial Fund,1972.

j 86. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: .More asthma in the south Bronx. The New Physician 21: 91-92, February,1973.

i

87. Sidel, V.W.: Medicine and public health. Pp.110-120_in China's Develop-l

! mental Experience, Michel Oksenberg, ed. New York: The Academy of Political Science, Columbia University, March,1973.

88. Kindig, D.A., and Sidel, V.W.: Social and scientific priorities: Process B.,

' and content. Pp. 369-378 in Ethical Issues'in Human Genetics, Hilton,

. et al., eds. New York: Plenum Press, 1973.

j 89. Sidel. V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disense: The allocation of expensive medical resources: who should decide? The New Physician 22,:

229-230,264 April, 1973.

~

90. e Hutter, A.M. , [Siinfarction.

after myocardial da1 ig.;'phine New ,yF_

Engl.J., *.DeSanctig_,R.WI.

Med. 288:ll44', May,

~

IEarly'i'973. hospital discharg

~ ~~~~ "~

j

91. Jonas, S. , Sidel. .V.W; The delivery of health care. Chapter 21 in Tice's i Practice of, Medicine. Hagerstown, Maryland: Harper & Row,1973.

1 i

r 92. Sidel, V.W.: The People's Republic of China. Pp. 63-71 in National Health i

Se rvice s : Their Impact on Medical Education and Their Role in Prevention, J.Z. Bowers and E. Purcell, eds. New York: Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation,1973.

I

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93. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic Health and Disease: Meningitis: The Patient, the Mother and the Doctors. The New Physician 2jl: 438-439, 448, July, 1973.
94. Sidel, V.W.: Medical Care: Playing Politics with Health. Pp.58-83 in What Nixon Ist Doing To Us. Alan Gartner, Colin Greer, and Frank Riessman, eds.

New York: Harrow Books, Harper & Row, 1973.

95. Sidel, V.W.: The Health Workers of the Fengsheng Neighborhood of Peking.

American Journal o_f Orthopsychiatry 4_3:_3 737-743, October, 1973.

96. Sidel, V.W.: The Role and Training of Medical Personnel in the People's Republic of China. Pp. 158-167 in Public Health JLrl the People's Republic oj[

China. Myron E. Wegman, Tsung-yi Lin, and Elizabeth F. Purcell, eds. New York:

Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation,1973.

97. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic Health and Disease: How Many Slices in a Patient? The New Physician j[2: 656-658, October, 1973.
98. Sidel, V.W. and Sidel, R.S.: Serve the People: Observations on, Medicine in the People's Republic of China. New York: The Josiah Macy, Jr. Founda-4 tion, 1973.
99. Wittes, J.T. , Colton, T. , and Sidel, V.W. : Capture-recapture Methods for Assessing the Completeness of Case Ascertainment When Using Multiple Information Sources. J. Chronic Diseases 'l7: j_ 25-36, February, 1974.

100. Sidel, V.W., and Sidel, R.S.: The Delivery of Medical Care in China.

Scientific American 230 (No.4): 19-27, April, 1974.

101. Sidel,EV.W.: Health Services in the People's Republic of China. Pp. 103-127 in Medicine and Society in China. John Z. Bowers and Elizabeth Purcell, eds.

New York: Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation, 1974.

102. Sidel, V.W.: China's Barefoot Doctors. Update International ~1': 4'25L429, : June, 1974 103. Lamm, S.H. ,and Sidel, V.W. : Public Health in Shanghai: An Analysis of Preliminary Data. Pp. 109-144 in China Medicine As We Saw It. Joseph R.

Quinn, ed. Washington, D.C.: Department of Healt'h! E3ucation, and Welfare, Publication No. (NIH)75-684, 1974.

104. Sidel, V.W. and Sidel, R.: Medicine in China: Individual and Society.

Pp. 23-36 in The Future oj[ Individualism, Hastings Center Studies 2, (No.3),

September,1974. -(Reprinted in Health, Volume 1, No.16, Gaithersburg, Maryland:

~

"S6clal Issues Resou'rces Series',' Y9'7'6) * ** '

(

105. Sidel. V.W., ed.: Sociogenic Health and Disease: The Patient Injured by Medical Care: Whose Responsibility? The New Physician 2]L: 62-64, November, 1974.

. _ .1 '

e .

106. Aranoff, G., and Sidel, V.W.: Discussion in Case Studies in Bioethics:

  • An IUD and the Question of Safety. The Hastings Center Report. Vol. 4, No. 6: 13, December, 1974.

107. Drucker, E., and Sidel, V.W.: The Communicables Disease Model of Heroin Addiction: A Critique, Amer. J., Drug and Alcohol Abuse 1: 301-311, 1974.

(Also, Sidel, V.W. and Drucker, E: Letter: Fu'rther Comments on the Communicable Disease Model of Heroin Addiction. Amer. J., Drug and Alcohol Abuse 3,: 369-372, 1976.) ..

108. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic Health and Disease: Research on Adolescent Prison Inmates: Can Free and Informed Consent Be Obtained? The New Physician 2ft(No.3): 52-55, March, 1975.

109. Sidel, R., and Sidel, V.W.: How Many Wheelbarrows of Nightsoil Do the Red Guards Collect to Serve the People of the Commune?: Education in The People's Republic of China. Columbia University Teacher's College Record 76:605-616 May, 1975.

110. Sidel, V.W. The New Health Practitioner--An International Perspective.

Pp. 21-24 in Proceedings _of,the Symposium ort New Health Practitioners itt Primary Care, New York: Bronx, Health Manpower Consortium, 1975.

111. Sidel, V.W.: Medical Care in the People's Republic of China. Archives of Internal Medicine 135:916-926, July, 1975. (Reprinted in Dominant Issues in, Medical Sociology, H.D. Schwartz and U.S." Kart, eds, Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.,1978.)

112. Belmar, R., and Sidel, V.W.: An International Perspective on Strikes and Strike Threats by Physicians: The Case of Chile. International Journal cg[ __,

Health Services 5: 53-64,1975. (Reprinted .in Samuel.Wolfe, ed., . Organization-of Health Workers ~~~

and Labor Conflict, Farmingdale, N.Y.: Baywood Publishing Co.,

1978).

113. Sidel, V.W. and Sidel, R.: The Health Care Delivery System of the People's Republic of China. Pp.1-12 in Health By,-The People, K.W. Newell, ed.

Geneva: World Health Organization,1975.

114. Sidel, V.W., and Sidel, R.: The Development of Health Care Services in the People's Republic of China, World Development 3:539-549, July-Aug., 1975.

(Peprinted, in revised form, in China's Road' to Development, Neville Maxwell, editor. Oxford: Pergamon Press, 197 8) .

115. Sidel, V.W.: Foreword: Services for the Bercaved: A Social-Medicine Perspective. In Bereavement: Its Psychosocial Aspects. Schoenberg, et al., eds.

New York: Columbia University Press, 1975.

116. Sidel, V.W. Quality for Whom? Effects of Professional Responsibility for Quality of Health Care on Equity. Bulletin of[ the New York Academy of ,

Medicine, R:' 164-176, January,'1976.

117. Sidel, R., and Sidel, V.W.: Health Care in China's Cities. New York Affairs 3: 42-53, Winter, 1976.

118. Eisner , J.D. , and Sidel, V.W. : Folk Medicine. Article in Encyclopedia ,

Americana, 1976.

l 119. Greifingsr R.B., and Sidel, V.W.: Accrican Medicine. Envi ronment 18_ (No'.4) :

6-18, May, 1976. (Reprinted in Health, Volune 1, No. 49, Gaithersburg,

  • Maryland: Social Issues Research Series,1976; and in The Nation's Health, Philip R. Lee, Nancy Brown, and Ioa Red, editors, San Francisco: Boyd &

Fraser Publi,shing, Co. ,1981.) _

j 120. Sidel, V.W. and Sidel, R.: Self-Reliance and the Collective Good: j Medicine in China. Pp. 57-75 in Ethics and_ Health Policy, R.M. Veatch i and Ray Branson, editors. Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger Publishing Co.,

1976, i

121. Drucker, E., and Sidel, V.W.: Scientific Freedom: Sacred Principle or Secular Politics?_ Pp. 113-122 in Genetic Destiny: Scientific Controversy and Social Conflict. E. Tobach and H.M. Proshansky, editors. New York:

AMS Press, 1976.

122. Sidel V.W., and Sidel, R.: Beyond Coping. Social Policy 7,(2):67-69, Sept.-Oct., 1976 123. Sidel, V.W., and Sidel, R.: Good Health Begins at Home. Parents'

./ Magazine _51 (11): 60,87-90, November, 1976. - - - - - - -- _ ___

124. Culpepper, L., Veatch, R.M., and Sidel, V.W.: Medical Ethics and Consent.

Journal of Family Practice _ 4_ (3) : 581-587, March, 1977.

125. Rubenstein, L., Mates, S., and Sidel, V.W.: Quality-of-Care Assessment by Process and Outcome Scoring: Use of Weighted Algorithmic Assessment Criteria for Evaluation of Emergency Room Care of Women with Symptoms of Urinary Tract infection. Annals of Internal Medicine 8_6_:617-625, May?l977.

126. Sidel, VJ . and Sidel, R.: Primary Health Care in Relation to Socio-Political Structure. Social Science., and Medicine @415- 419., April, _1977.

127. Drosness, D.L., Jona.1 S., and Sidel, V.W.: 'Ihe Delivary of Health Care.

Chapter 21 in Practice g Mediciu'b,Vol.1. Hagerstown, Maryland: Harper &

Row, 1977 (Revision of item 91).

128. Sidel, V.W. and Sidel, R.: Health Care Services (Article in a special issue on China). Social Scientist (Journal of the Indian School of Social Sciences) 5_

(10-11):114-130, May-June, 1977 (Revision of item 114).

129. Sidel, V.W. and Sidel, R.: A Healthy State: An International Perspecti e cn the Crisis in U.S. & dical Care. New York: Pantheon Books, 1978.

l (Chapters reprinted in The Sociology of Health and Illness: Critical l

i Perspectives, Peter Conrad and Rochelle Kern, editors, N.Y. : St. Martin's Press, 1981.)

i 130. Sidel, V.W.: Special Presentation: Who Does Prinnry Care? Personnel Selection and Training. Primary Health Care ,in, Industrialized Nations, l Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 310: 188-192, 1978.

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131. Sidel, V.W.: Humane Qualities to Meet Human Needs and Technical Skill to Meet Technical Needs: How Can We Bridge the Cap in Primary Care? Primary Health Care in, Industrialized Nations, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 310: 193-197, 1978.

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132. Sidel, V.W.: The Right to Health Care: An International Perspective.

Pp. 341-50 in Bioethics and Human Rights: A Reader for Health Pro-Boston:

feasionals. Elsie Bandman and Bertram Bandman, editors.

Little, Brown and Co., 197.. 8 Kindig, D.A., Sidel, V.W., and Birnbaum, I.: National Health Insurance 133.

for Inner City Underserved Areas: General Criteria and Analysis of a Proposed Administrative Mechanism. Pp. 60-75, 82 in Effects cd[ the DREW Publication Payment Mechanism og,the Health Care Delivery _ System.

No. (PRS) 78-3227. Washington, D.C.: National Center for Health Ser-vices Research, Department of Health, Education and Welfare,1978, Craifinger, R.B., and Sidel, V.W.:

Career Opportunities in Medicine.

134.

Chapter 12 in Practice of[ Medicine, Vol. 1, Hagerstown, Maryland:

Harper & Row, 1978.

135. Sidel, R. and Sidel, V.W.: Book Review: The_ Politics of Medicine in China: The Policy Process 1949-1977, by David Lampton. New China 4, (No. 3): 44-46, Fall, 1978.

136. Geiger, H.J., and Sidel, V.W.: Medical School Admissions: The Case for a Quota. Hastings Center Report 8 (no. 5): 18-20, 1978.

Biomedical Science and War. Pp. 1699-1704 137. Sidel V.W., and Sidel, M.:

in Encyclopedia cd[ Bioethics. Warren T . Reich, editor. New York: The Free Press (Macmillan), 1978.

Social Values, Health, and University Response. Pp. 42-57 138. Sidel, V.W.:

in The Future _ o_f Academic Community Medicine _ g Developing Countries _.

Willoughby Latham, editor. New York: Rockefeller Foundation, 1979.

139. Solon, L.R., and Sidel, V.W.: Editorial: Health Implications of Nuclear Power Production. Annals of Internal Medicine 90:424-6, March, 1979..

(Also, Solon, L.R., and Sidel, V.W.: Letter to the Editor: Nuclear Power and Health, 91,:315, Aug., 1979 and Risks of Nuclear Power, 92:125-6, Jan., 1980) (Reprinted in Mark Reader, editor, Atom's Eve: Ending the Nuclear Afdl. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1980) i 140. Geiger, H.J. , and Sidel, V.W. , editors : Special issue of The New Physician:

" China: Are There Lessons for Our Western Medicine?," Vol. 28, No. 1, r January, 1979. (Includirg Geiger, H.J. , and Sidel, V.W. , Epilogue: The l

Search for Questions, Pp.54-5) .

141. Sidel, R., and Sidel, V.W.: Visiting China's Health Care Facilities.

Pp. 80-83 in The China Guidebook: A Traveler's Guide to the People's Republic of China. Arne J. deKeijzer and Fredric M. Kaplan, editors.

New York: Eurasia Press, 1979.

l 142. Side'., V.W., and Sidel, R.: Medical Care in Sweden: Planned Pluralism, Social Change. < in Sweden (Swedish Information Service), No. 10, Pp. 1-8,

! February,1979 (Revision of chapter on Sweden in publication #129 above) .

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143. Sidel, V.W 3, and Sidel, R.: Organization of Health Services in the People's Republic of China. Chapter 19 in Health Handbook: An International Reference on Care and Cure, George K. Chacko, editor.

Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Co., Fp 296-314 144. Sidel, V.W.: Pubif e Health in International Perspective: From

" Helping the Victim" to " Blaming the Victim" to " Organizing the Victims".

Canadian Journal of Public Health 10:234-239, July / August, 1979.

145. Sidel, V.W.: Introduction to Primary Care Conference, Part III:

Research. Journal oj[ Ambulatory Care Management 2 (3): 89-90, August, 1979.

146. Sidel, V.W., and Sidel, R.: Health Care Services as Part of China's Revolution and Development. Pp. 155-168 in China's Road to Development (second edition). Neville Maxwell, editor. Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1979 (Revised and expanded version of #114 above).

147. Sidel, V.W.: Book Review: Social Medicine: The Advance of Organized Health Services _ in, America, Milton Roemer. Inquiry 16, (3): 284-285, Fall, 1979.

148. Sidel V.W.: Book Review: Cancer in China, Henry S. Kaplan and Patricia J. Tsuchitani, editors. Quarter 1v Review of Biology Sjt (3):371, 1979.

149. Sidel, V.W.: Book Review: Primary Health Care, World Health Organiz--

ation. International Journal of Epidemiology 8 (2): 187, June, 1979.

150. Sidel, V.W.: Medicine in China 1971-1979: Implications for the United States. Syracuse Medical Alumni Journal, ' Fall 1979, pp. 10-15 151. Bloomgarden, z. and Sidel, V.W.: Evaluation of Utilizar. ion of Laboratory Tests in Hospital Emergency Room. American Journal oJ[ Pubite Health 70 (5): 525-528, May, 19 80 152. Sidel, V.W.: The Philosopher in the Hospital: Philosoph'y in Medicine and Philosophy of Medicine. Pp. 13-18 in Philosophers in Medical Centers, William Ruddick, editor. New York: The Society for Philosophy and Public Af fairs, 1980.

153. Sidel, V.W.: Chinese Medicine. Article in Academic American Encyclopedia.

Princeton, N.J.: Arete Publishing Co., 19 80.

154 Sidel, V.W.: International Comparisons of Health Services: How? Who?

Why? Policy Studies Journal 9 (2): 300-308, 1980.'(Reprinted as a chapter in Critical Issues in Health Policy, Ralph A. Straetz, Marvin Lieberman, and Alice Sarde11, editors., Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, 1981, pp. 175-184.)

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1 155. Sidel, V.W.: Health Care: Prices Up, Distribution Still Unfair.

i Democratic Lef t 8(8):7-10, October,1980.

) 156. Sidel, V.W.: The Department of Social Medicine in the 1970's and 1980's. Montefiore Medicine 5(2):54-60, 1980.

157. Sidel, V.W.: The Need for Structural Change. Pp. 168-185 in working for a Healthier America, Walter J. McNerney, editor. Cambridge, MA:

Ballinger Publising Co., 1980.

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158. Sidel, R. and Sidel V.W. : Revolutionary Optimism: Models of Commitment to Community from Other Societies. Pp. 305-317 in Prevention Through Political Action and Social Change, Justin M. Jaffe and George W.

Albee, editors. Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England (for 1

the University of Vermont), 1981.

159. San Agustin, M., Sidel, V.W., Drosness, D.L., Kelman, H., Levine, H.,

and 'tevens, E.: Controlled Clinical Trial of " Family Care" Compared with " Child-Only Care" in the Comprehensive Primary Care of Children.

l Medical Care 19(2):202-222, February, 1981.

i l 160. Mates, S. and Sidel, V.W.: Quality Assessment by Process and Outcome i Methods: Evaluation of emergency Room Care of Asthmatic Adults. American Journal of Public Health 71(7):687-693, July, 1981.

I 161. Sidel, R. and Sidel, V.W.: Health and Human Services. Pp. 291-308 in i Encyclopedia of China Today (Third Edition), Fredric M. Kaplan and Julian M. Tobin, editors. New York: Harper and Row, 1981.

j 162. Sidel, V.W.: Buying Death With Taxes: Impact of the Arms Race on Health Care. Pp. 35-47 in The Final Epidemic: Physicians and Scientists i on Nuclear War, Ruth Adams and Susan Cullen, editors. Chicago: Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science, 1981.

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163. Sidel, V.W. and Sidel, R.: All Self-Care is Not Solipsistic But Selective Citation Surely Is: A Reply to Katz and Levin. International Journal of Health Services 11(4):653-657, 1981.

164. Lindheim, S. and Sidel, V.W.: The Hospital's Responsibility to the

} Community. Chapter in Hospital-Based Ambulatory Care, Emil Pascarelli,

! editor. New York: Appleton-Century Crofts, 1982 (in press).

4 165. Mahler, D.M., Veatch, R.M., and Sidel, V.W.: Ethical Issues in Informed Consent: Research on Medical Cost Containment. Journal of The American j Medical Association 247(4):481-483, 1982

166. Sidel, V.W.
Structure and Organization of Primary Care in International Perspective. Chapter in Primary Health Care: More Than Medicine.

l Englewood, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1982 (in press).

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  • O 167. Sidel, R., and Sidel, V.W: The Health of China: Current Conflicts in Medical and Human Sarvices for One Billion People. Boston:-Beacon Press, 1982.

168. Sidel, V.W.: The Race to the Year 2000: Who Will Survive? Health and Medicine 1(1):23-24, Winter, 1982.

169. Sidel, R., and Sidel, V.W.: Shoes for the Barefoot Doctor? U.S.-

China Review 6(2), March-April, 1982.

170. Sidel, V.W.: Health Care: Privatization, Privilege,. Pollution, and Profit. Chapter in What Reagan g Doing to Us, Alan Cartner, Colin Greer, and Frank Riessman, editors. New York: Harper and Row, 1982 (in press).

171. Belmar, R., Drucker, E., Michaels, D., and Sidel, V.W.: The Export of Health Activism: A Remedy for the Export of Hazardous Industry. Chapter in Exportation g Hazardous Industries, Products, and Technologies g Developing Countries, Jane Ives, editor. Cam 5 ridge, MA: MIT Press (in press).

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i Abstracts:

A.1 Solomon, A.K. , Sidel, V.W. , and Paganelli, C.V. : Pore dimensions in the red cell membrane. P.roceed.ings of the First National Biophysics Conference.

Yale Univ. Press, 1959. P. 322.

A.2 Sidel, V.W. , and Hoffman, J.F. : Water transport across membrane analogues.

Fed. Proc. 20: 137, 1961.

A,3 Earley, L.E., Sidel, V.W. , and Orlof f, J. : Factors influencing permeability of a vasopressin-sensitive membrane. Fed. Proc. 21; 145, 1962.

A,4 Sidel, V.W., and Hoffman, J.F.: Apparent " solvent drag" across a liquid membrane. Biophysical Society Abstracts (Seventh Annual Meeting),

New York, 1963.

A.5 Sidel, V.W., Bunow, P.F. , Katchalsky, A. , and Solomon, A.K. : Measurement of thickness of unstirred layer at red cell surface. Biophysical Society Abstracts (Eighth Annual Meeting), Chicago,1964.

The significance A.6 Nathan, D.G., Oski, F.A., Sidel, V.W., and Diamond, L.K.:

of erythrocyte crenation in the pathology of hemolytic anemias. J. Clin.

Invest. 43; 1260, 1964.

A.7 Sidel, V.W. , Savitz, D. , and Solomon, A.K.i Osmotic properties of the human erythrocyte. Clinical Research 12; 231, 1964.

A.8 Sidel, V.W., and Knowles, J.H.: Differences between ward and private medical patients at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Clinical Research 13; 344, 1965.

A.9 Sidel,V.W.,Greenes,R.k.,Barnett, G.O., and Knowles, J.H.: Computer-based analysis and display of hospital admission patterns. Abstracts of Contributed Papers, Medical Care Section, American Public Health Association, San Francisco.

Washington, D. C.: U.S. Public Health Service, 1966.

Sidel, V.W. , Greenes, R. A. , Barnett, G.O., and Knowles, J.H.: Analysis of A.10 patterns of hospital admission and care using computer retrieval techniques.

Clinical Research 14; 363, 1966.

A.11 Klainer, L.M., and Sidel, V.W.: Referral patterns, medical urgency, and

" appropriate" use of the emergency ward of a large urban teaching hospital.

Clinical Research 15: 342, 1967.

A.12 Sidel, V.W., Mansfield, P., and Jefferys, M.: Medical practice in the urban l core: Survey of G.P. 's in the London Borough of Camden. Clinical Research i _1_7.: 411, 1969.

i A.13 Kindig D.A., and Sidel, V.W.: Method for analysis of proposals for national

! health insurance. Clinical Research 19,: 502, 1971.

i A.14 Starrett, B., Besses, G., Kuebler, T., McCloy, S., Finkelberg, Z., Kindig, D.,

l Wise, H., and Sidel, V.W.: New approach to graduate training in medicine.

Clinical Research 19: 505, 1971.

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I A. 15 Jonas , S. , O' Dwyer, E. , Zendel, J. , and Sidel, V.W. : Short-term '

ambulatory heroin detoxification using methadone. Clinical Research 20,: 474, 1972.

A. 16 Mallory, G. , Rubenstein, L. , Drosness, D. , Kleiner, G. , and Sidel, V.W.: Evaluation of factors responsible for delay in I obtaining abortion. Clinical Research 20,: 476, 1972.

A.17 Sidel, V.W.: The ' role and training of health workers in the People's Republic of Qiina. Abstracts of the Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, 82-83, 1972, t A.18 Sidel, V.W.: The participation of people in health care in the People's Republic of China. Abstracts of the Annual Nketing of the  ;

American Public Health Association,106,1972.

A.19 Drucker, E., and Sidel, V.W.: The communicable disease model of heroin addiction: a critique. Abstracts of the Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, 95, 1973.

A.20 Belmar, R., and Sidel, V.W.: A new approach to ambulatory medical care:

the Chilean experience. Clinical Research 22:376A, 1974.

A. 2'1 San Agustin, M. , Sidel, V.W. , Drosness , D. , Kelman, H. , Levine, H. , and i Stevens, E. Comparative Effectiveness of Family Care and Child Only Care.

Selected Studies in Medical Care and Medical Economics, Annual Report, '

1975.

A.22 Sidel, V.W. , San Agus tin, M. , Drosness , D. , Kelman, H. , Levine, H. , and Stevens, E. Comparative Effectiveness of Family Care and Child Only Care:

Progress Report. Abstracts of The Annual Meeting of the American Public '

Health Association, 1975.

A.23 Rubenstein, L. , Mates, S. , and Sidel, V.W. : Medical Audit by Process and  ;

Outcome Scoring: Use of a Weighted Algorithmic Protocol For Evaluation {

of Care of Ambulatory Patients With Symptoms of Urinary Tract Infection.  !

Clinical Research 24,: 300A, 1976.

A.24 Zerkin, S., callan, M., Belmar, R., and Sidel, V.W.: Training Health Promotors in a Neighbor-to-Neighbor Program. Abstracts of Contributed Papers, Public Health Education Section, American Public Health Associa-tion, 1976.

A.25 San Agustin, M., Sidel, V.W., Drosness, D., Kelman H., Levine, H., and Stevens, E.: Comparative Ef fectiveness of Family Car'e and Child-Only Care:

Final Report. Abstracts of Contributed Papers, Maternal and Child Health Section, American Public Health Association,1977.

A.26 Sidel, V.W. , San Agustin, M. , Drosness , D. , Kelman, H. , Levine, H. , and Stevens, E.: Comparative Effectiveness of Family Care and Child-Only Care:

Methodologic Issues. Abstracts of Contributed Papers, Medical Care Section, American Public Health Association, 1977.

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