ML20083N835

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Testimony of Hj Geiger & Vw Sidel.Formulating Adequate Medical Care Response to Major Radiological Release Impossible Since Scenario Consequences Variable.Prof Qualifications Encl
ML20083N835
Person / Time
Site: Indian Point  Entergy icon.png
Issue date: 01/31/1983
From: Geiger H, Sidel V
FRIENDS OF THE EARTH, NEW YORK CITY AUDUBON SOCIETY
To:
References
ISSUANCES-SP, NUDOCS 8302030199
Download: ML20083N835 (54)


Text

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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION o ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD Dal gg 7gp' Before Administrative Judges: "M3-James P. Gleason, Chairman Dr. Oscar H. Paris *g3 Frederick J. Shon

-2 411 :0 '/

x -

In the Matter of x M[

x Docket Nos.

CONSOLIDATED EDISON COMPANY OF x NEW YORK (Indian Point Unit 2) x 50-247-SP x 50-286-SP POWER AUTHORITY OF THE STATE OF x NEW YORK (Indian Point Unit 3) x January 31, 1983 x

x DIRECT TESTIMONY Of DR. H. JACK GEIGER And DR. VICTOR W. SIDEL l

l On Behalf Of t

FRIENDS OF THE EARTH, INC.

l And i

THE NEW YORK CITY AUDUBON SOCIETY l

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8302030199 830131 PDR ADOCK 05000247 T PDR t

1 This testimony has been prepared on behalf of Friends I of the Earth and the New York City Audubon Society by Drs.

H. Jack Geiger and Victor W. Sidel. Dr. Geiger, along with his M.D. degree from Case-Western Reserve School of Medi-cine, has an M.S. In Epidemiology from the Harvard School of Public Health. He is the Arthur C. Logan Professor of Community Health at the City College of the City University of New York and Chairman of the Department of Community Health and Social Medicine in the School of Biomedical Education at City College. Dr. 51 del is a graduate of Harvard Medical School and has had additional training in epidemiology and blostatistics at the Harvard School of Pub 11c Health and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He has been a member of the Commission on Ra-diation Protection of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. He is the Chairperson of the Department of Social Medicine at Montefiore Medical Center and Professor of Community Health at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Drs. Geiger and Sidel are co-authors of a major study of the problems of medical care organization and delivery in circumstances of widespread radioactive contamination (following a thermo-nuclear weapon detonation) and have published widely on the health and social effects associated with nuclear weapons.

Both Dr. Geiger and Dr. Sidel are members of the National Board of Directors and of the National Advisory Board of Physicians for Social Responsibility. Copies of their c.v.'s are attached.

3 plants). It is our professional view that the proximity of the Indian Point reactors to areas of such high population number and concentration, given a finite possibility'of such an event and the unknowability of its probabilty and charac-ter, makes adequate preparation to protect the pubile health impossible.

(1) Impossibility of determining the population at risk of significant radiation exposure in the case of an actual event.

Computer modelling under stated assumptions (type and magnitude of release, wind direction and velocity, plume characteristics, etc.) have been used to generate "at risk" figures in a wide variety of hypothetical scenarios. But in most actual events the data will simply not be rapidly available to determine which scenario is in fact being enacted, and therefore which population is at risk and which is relatively safe and unexposed. Accurate delimitation of the problem--or valid reassurance to others--will therefore be impossible. Furthe , computer modelling is necessarily based on ideal ized assun ptions (e.g., constant wind behavior and symmetrical plumes and wedges) which are unlikely to be realized in actuality; nor will it be possible rapidly to determine the degree of variation from prior assumptions.

Thus this case varies radically from the case of 1

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case of a major release of radioactivity, as 654,925 people if the wind at Indian Point is blowing toward the south-southeast; as 126,175 people if the wind is blowing toward the southeast; as 1,305,500 people if the wind is blowing toward the south; as 244,340 people if the wind is blowing toward the south-southwest; and as 48,610 people if the wind is blowing toward the southwest. In fact, for purposes of this analysis, it does not matter in which of the above directions the wind is blowing. In each case, it will be impossible effectively to perform triage on the population at risk. That is, within that population, there will be no realistic means of identifying and sorting out those who have had minimal radiation exposure and will recover without any medical intervention, those who have had moderate radiation exposure and will survive at given levels of medical Intervention, and those who have suffered lethal radiation doses and will die whether or not medical inter-vention is carried out.

Unless the entire population had been wearing dosi-l l meters, there will be no way for any individual--or any l

physician or health worker examining that Individual--to determine either the whole-body dose or the bone-marrow dose that individual has received. Determinations will initially have to be made on the basis of symptoms--but the early symptoms of mild, moderate and lethal radiation exposures are identical: nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. (Those with i

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. 7 population at risk seeks medical care, the medical care system (hospitals, health centers, c11nics, and the private offices of physicians and other health workers) would, under the best of circumstances, be overwhelmed. This would be true even in the areas with the highest concentrations of such resources, for they are also the areas of highest population concentrations. In major metropolitan areas like New York City, medical disaster plans have been drawn up in an attempt to rationalize the response to major disasters.

But these assume that most of the sources of medical care are themselves safe and unaffected by the risk. They assume that hospital staffs (like other essential workers such as bus drivers, police, fire department or power plant person-nel) will remain at work despite perceived threats to their own safety or that of their immediate families. These assumptions would not hold for a major radiological emergen-cy in which the metropolitan area itself was threatened--or perceived as being threated. To our knowledge, no realistic medical disaster response plan has been drawn up for medical care sources in New York City or it surrounding suburban areas to meet a threat of this type.

Even if we assumed that such a disaster plan were in place and were operative, and that effective triage were possible, the numbers of people suffering exposures suffi-cient to require active medical care would overwhelm the resources of the medical care system. Furthermore, for the

'. 9 rationally are unjustified. Even if such assumptions are made, the probability exists that the system will be over-whelmed by the numbers of people seeking care.

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CURRICUILN VITAE H. JACK w ax, M.D., M. SCI. HYG.

NE C. ICGAN PPGESSCR T CCM1WITY .NEDICINE School of Bicmedical Educaticn City College of Nea York N 138th Street and Convent Avenue c

-- New York, Nea York' 10031

__ Ecme Ar' dress 60 Riverside Drive Nea York, Nea York 10024 b

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...x... . ~ . . . . . . ~ r . .: u - .:c Arthur C. Logan Professor of Co== unity Medicine and Director, Program in Health Medicine and Society, School of Biomedical Education, City College of New York.

American Public Health Association Medical Care Section Council, APHA Co=mittee on Health Services Research; APhl. Committee on Public Participation in Health Services; APHA Task Force on Latin American Health.

Institute of Medicine, Nccional Academy of Sciences, Steering Committee, Study on Integration of Feaerally Funded Health Services.

Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, Planning Committee, Conference on " Behavioral Perspectives on Health Risks Among the Disadvantaged".

Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, Planning Co=mittee, Conference on " Community-Oriented Primary Care".

Ntw York State Health Advisory Council, Task Force on Primary Care, Albany, New York.

Health Systems Agency of New York City: Ambulatory and Acute Care Task Force.

Nsw York Academy of Medicine, Committee on Medicine in Society, New York, New York.

A=srican College of Preventive Medicine, Committee on International Health.

National Association of Community Health Centers, Committee on Health Policy, Washington, D.C.

1 National Medical Fellowships, Board of Trustees and Chairman, Program Review Committee, New York, New York Physicians for Social Responsibility, Board of Directors, National Advisory Board, Chairperson, National Policy Committee.

International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Board of Directors ,

Boston, Massachusetts.

National Self-Help Clearing House, Board of Advisors, New York, New York.

National Coalition to Save Public General Hospitals, Executive Committee, Chicago, Illinois.

Council for the Advancement of Science Writing, Board of Directors, Evanston, Illinois.

Harlem Hospital, Board of Advisors, Physician's Assistant Training Program, New York.

Lecturer on Co=munity Medicine, Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.

Associate, Columbia University Seminar on Social and Preventive Medicine, New York.

Consultant on Curriculum, Graduate Program in Health Policy and Management, and Cooperative Health Improvement Program, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.

l American Medical Student Association, Professional Advisory Co=mittee, Health Watch

, Documentation Project, Chantilly, Virginia.

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r Elic:. ;. va: A Date of 31rth: November 11, 1925 New York, New York EDUCATION 1941 - 43 University of Wisconsin, Liberal Arts.

1947 - 50 University of Chicago, Division of Biological Sciences.

1954 - 58 Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio M.D. de2ree, June 1958.

1959 - 60 Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, M. Sci. uve. (Eoidemiology) degree, June 1960.

CLINICAL TRAINING 1958 - 59 Intern, II and IV (Harvard) Medical Service, Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.

1962 - 63 Assistant Resident in Medicine, II and IV (Harvard) Medical Service, Boston City Hospital, Boston,' Massachusetts.

1963 - 64 Senior Resident in Medicine, II and IV (Harvard) Medical Service, Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, and Research Fellow, Thorndike and Channing Laboratories, Harvard Medical School.

1964 - 65 Clinical Assistant in Medicine, II and IV (Harvard) Medical Service, 3cston City Hosp: al, 3oston, Massachusetts.

1965 - 66 Clinical Associate in Medicine, II and IV (Harvard) Medical Service, Boston _, City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.

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1959 - 61 Research Fellow, Depar tment of Preventive Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Joint appoint =ent as Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Joint Training Program in Social Science and Medicine, Department of Social Relations , Harvard University.

1961 - 62 Instructor in Preventive Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Clinical Assistant in Medicine, Harvard Medical Service, Boston City Hospital; Chief Consultant, NIMH-Harvard School of Public Health Cross-Cultural Survey of Social Factors in the Etiology of Disease.

1964 - 65 Assistant Professor of Public Health, Harvard School of Public Health; Clinical Assistant in Medicine, Harvard Medical Service, Boston City Hospital.

1965 - 66 Associate Professor of Preventive Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts; Clinical Associate in Medicine, Harvard Medical Service, Boston City Hospital.

1965 - 71 Project Co-Director (1965-68) and Project Director (1968-71), Te~ts Cc=prehensive Con unity Health Action Program; Project Director (1965-71)

Tuf ts Delta-Mississippi Health Center; Project Co-Director (1965-69) and Project Director (1969-71), Tufts Columbia Point-Boston Health Center.

1966 - 69 Professor of Preventive Medicine and Director, Division of Community Health, Department of Preventive Medicine, Tuf ts University School of Medicine.

1969 - 71 Professor and Chariman, Department of Community Health and Social Medicine, Tuf ts University School of Medicine and Chairman, Ambulatory Care, Tufts-New England Medical Center.

1971 - 73 Professor and Chairman, Department of Com= unity Medicine, School of Medicine, State University of New York at Stony Brook, New York; (on leave, 1972-73); Lecturer on Medicine, Harvard Medical School.

1972 - 73 Visiting Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.

1973 - 77 Professor of Co=munity Medicine, School of Medicine, State University of New York at ' Stony Brook, New York; resumed Lepartmental Chairmanship, 1976.

1978 - Arthur C. Logan Professor of Coenunity Medicine and Director, Program in Health, Medicine and Society, School of Biomedical Education, The City College of New York, City University of New York.

. v. a u . .. c- :u. w & n C.n Am,erican Public Health A;sociation (Fellow)

A=erican College of Preventive Medicine American Association fo r the Advancement of Science (Fellow)

International Epidemiological Association Association of Teachers of Preventive Medicine Scicntists' Institute for Public Information (Fellow)

Association fo r the Behavioral Sciences and Medical Education NLw York Academy of Medicine (Fellow) -

ACADEMIC AWARDS AND HONORS Distinguished Public Service Award, National Association of Community Health Canters, for " outstanding contributions in the private and public sectors which have fest=ted support for community health delivery programs", 1981.

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Commtncement speaker, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, ~

May 17, 1981.

Natitnal Health Achievement Award in Community Medicine, 50th Anniversary Distinguishad Service Award of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Associations, for " developing a new concept of community health care as an effective instrument of community charge",

1979.

Amtrican Public Health Association, first annual APRA-Rosenhaus Foundat a n Awai,1 g;;

Excellence, for " exceptionally meritorious achievement in i= proving the h=11th , c' the American people", 1973.

Distinguished Service Award, Mississippi Association for Community Heal:a for the Poor, 1973.

Milbank Faculty Fellowship in Social Medicine, 1966-71.

Commencement speaker, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroi:. Michiaan.

May 18, 1970.

Postdoctoral Research Fellowship, National Institute of Mental Health, .er studios in the Social Sciences in Medicine Program, Department of Social Ec 2tions ,

Harvard University, 1959-61.

Rockefeller Foundation Training Scholarship for studies and research i .ceial .n..di _

2-Department of Social, Family & Preventive Medicine; University of s>31 Medical School, Durban, Union of South Africa, with Professor Sidney Kark. #5 7-

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-Research Fellowship , Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts;
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nme rs) 1955, 1956.

Kettering . Jundatiott Fellowship, Western Reserve University School of Medicine, 4

1954-58.

Honors Scholarship, 3101081 cal Sciences, University of Chicago, 1948-50.

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(Partial Listing) -

1980 Seminar Co-Director, Residency Program in Social Medicine, Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center, Bronx, New York, on Training for Community-Oriented Primary Care.

1980 Consultant, Department of Social Medicine, Hadassah-Hebrew University School of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel.

1980 Faculty Leader, American Medical Student Association Study-Tour of Health Care, People's Republic of China.

1980 Ad Hoc Advisory Committee to the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare on the Structure and Mission of the Department.

1978 - 80 Governing Council, American Public Health Association.

1978 - 80 Consultant, Medical Care Quality and Organization. Division of HMO Qualification and Compliance, Office of Quality Standards, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Rockville, Maryland.

1978 - 80 Consultant, Policy Research on Medically Underserved Areas, National Center for Health Services Research, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Hyattsville, Maryland.

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1978 - 80 Consultant, Agency for International Development / University of North Carolina School of Public Health, on Practical Training in Health Education (Cameroons). _

1978 7aculty Leader, First American Medical Student Association Study-Tour of Health Care, People's Republic of China.

1975 - 78 Editorial Board, American Journal of Public Health. ..

1976 - 78 Consultant to:

National Association of Community Health Centers, Washington, D.C.

Pan American Health Organization, on health team development in community health centers, Washington, D.C.

U.S.-China Physicians Friendship Association, Washington, D.C.

1976 - 77 Committee on Nominations, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Washington, D.C.

1974 - 77 Governing Council, American Public Health Association.

1975 - 76 Member, Task Force on Alternatives in. Health and National Development, Dag Hammarskjold Foundation, Uppsala, Sweden.

1974 - 79 Soard of Directors, Scientists' Institute for Public Information, New York, New York.

19 74 Me=ber, Cuban-American Health Exchange Study-Tour of Health Care in Cuba.

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1973 Member, China Medical Association-Ministry of Health Invitational Study-

, Tour of dealth Care in the People's Republic of China.

1972 - 75 Regional Advisory Group, Nassau-Suf folk Regional Medical Program-CHP, Happauge, Long Island, New York.

1971 - 73 Consultant to:

Milbank Me=orial Fund, New York, on new programs, publications and editorial policy.

Council on Environmental Quality, Washington, D.C., on rural health se rvices .

Maternal and Child Health / Family Planning Research and Training Center, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, Tennessee.

American Heart Association, New York, Task Force on Responsibilities in Disadvantaged Areas.

Institute for the Study of Health and Society, Washington, D.C. on educational programs and materials.

Social Poliev (a journal), New York, on editorial policy.

University of Tennessee Medical School, Memphis, on teaching and curriculum revision in preventive and community medicine.

A=erican Association of Teachers of Preventive Medicine, Committee on Social

-and Behavioral Sciences.

Editorial Board, Environment.

1969 - 71 The Rockefeller Foundation, New ' fork: Member, Task Force on Rural Poverty.

American Psychiatric Association, Washington, D.C., Member, Task Force on Research Aspects of Community Mental Health Centers.

White House Conference on Youth, Planning Commission, Member, Task Force on Poverty.

White House Conference on Food, Nutrition and Health, Universities Panel.

Center for the Biology of Natural Systems, Washington University, St. Louis, Consultant on rural environmental health.

1967 - 69 Special Advisory Co=mittee on Health and Poverty to the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, Washington, D.C.

Committee on Health Inf or=ation Sys tems , M. I.T.-Harvard Joint Center for Urban S tudies , Soston, Massachusetts.

Board of Directors, National Citizens Co= mission of Inquiry into Health Services for Americans, Washington, D.C.

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Tra' vel and study of the health care system in: Union of South Africa and Swaziland (1957); Puerto Rico (studies with Dr. John Grant) (1960);

Nigeria (1963); Uganda, Tunisia (1964); Chile (Invitation of the Ministry of Health), Argentina (1968); Jamaica (1970); People's Republic of China (Invitation of the Chinese Medical Association, PRC) (1973, 1978, 1980);

Cuba (Invitation of the Ministry of Health) (1974); Iran (1975); Republic of the Ca=eroons (1979); Israel (1980).

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Vice-Chairman, Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), Madison, Wisconsin, .1943. ,

Organizer, National Maritime Union-CIO, National Communications Association-CIO, 1944-47.

Civil Liberties Chairman, American Veterans Committee, Chicago, 1947-50; member, Provident Medical Associates Committee on Discrimination in Medical Education, 1947-50; Vice-Chairman, Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), Chicago, 1948-50; Chicago-area Chairman, Committee to End Discrimination in the Armed Forces, 1950.

Executive Committee, New York Local, American Newspaper Guild-CIO, 1952-54.

Mtmbar, Special Committee on Science in the Promotion of Human Welfare, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1957-62.

Founding Member, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Boston, Massachusetts, 1961.

Founding Member, Medical Committee for Human Rights (MCHR),1964, Field Coordinator, MCHR Mississippi Program (August 1964); Member, National Program Committee (1964-67); National Program Chairman (1965).

Conruitant on Health and Human Services Policy to:

Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee,1964;

- Southern Christian Leadership Conference,,1965-68; Health Service Planner, SelEa-to-Montgomery march, 1965; Student Health Organization, 1967-68;

-- Nacional Urban League, 1969-70.

Cheirman, Health Committee, the Delta Ministry of the National Council of Churches, New York and Greenville, Mississippi, 1964-66; Member, Commission on the Delta Ministry, National Council of Churches, New York, 1965-68.

Board of Governors, Institute of Current World Affairs, New York, New York, 1968-75; Chairman of the Board, 1970-71.

Steering Committee, Emergency Committee to Save Chilean Health Workers, New York, 1974-79.

Founding Member, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Boston, Massachusetts, 1980.

OTHER POSITIONS 1941 - 43 Reporter, Madison Capitol-Times, Madison, Wisconsin.

1947 - 30 News Editor, Chicago Bureau, International News Service 1950 - 54 Science Editor, International News Service, New York, (now United Press International); contributor to New York Times Magazine, Harper's Saturday Review and other publications; special writing projects for American Cancer Society, American Chemical Society, Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research, Lasker Foundation, etc.

1943 - 47 Ensign, Lieut. J.G. (Radar-Radio), U.S. Merchant Marine.

5905 W 4 , 3ccks:

The Train;ne '- Jood ?hvsicians: :ri:ical Factcrs in :areer :ho :es.

_yden, T recent, Je:ger, H. Jack anc Peterson, Osier L., Hariard J ni'. e rs it.

?ress, Cancridge. MA, 1966 A Com=cawealth Fund Book T.

(3) Journal Articles, Moncerachs and Bock Chaoteps:

(1) "The Social Responsibility of the Physician", Scientific Monthly, 85, 2; August 1957.

(2) " Social Ascects of Science", "eport of the Interim Committee on Social Aspects of Science, Ame ric ar. Association f or the Advancement of Science, Science, 125, i;3; 1957 (3) " Family Health in Three Cultures : Implications fo r Medical Education", a thesis submitted in partial fulfillment o f the requirements for the M.D.

degree, Wes tern Reserve University ; simeo . , 142 pages, Library of Medicine ,

Western Reserve University; 1958.

(1) " Zulu Health and Culture Change", tonograph, 42 pages, Seminar on Health and Illness in Cross-Cultural Perspective, Harvard School of Publich Health, April 1960.

(5) " Science and Human Welfare", Report of the AAAS Committee on Social Aspects of Science, Science, 132, 68; 1960; with Commoner, Barry; Mead, Margaret; et. al.

(6) " Medicine and the Social Contract: Su=ma ry and P re sp ec t" , Chapter II in Medical Education and Medical Care, published as a volume by the Association of American Medical Colleges and as Part 2, Journal of Medical Education, Vol. 36, 12; 1961.

(71 " Science and Hucan Survival", with members of the AAAS Cccmittee on Science in the Promotion of Human Welfare, Science, 134, 20S0; 1961.

(3) "The Medical Consequences of Thermonuclear War: I. Introduction (with Sidel,

.  ; Lown, 3.; and Nathan, D.); II. The Physician's Role in the Post-Attack Period (with Sidel, V.; and Lown, 3.)", New England Journal of Medicine, 266:

113~-1144; 1962.

(9) " App raisal of '!edical S tudents ' Abilities as Related to Training and Careers after Graduation", Peterson, 0.L.; Lyden, F.; Geiger, H.J.; and Colton, T.;

New Eneland Jcurnal of Medicine, 269: 1174; Nov. 1963.

(10) "The Epidemiolog-j o f Rhewnatoid Arthritis : A Review with Special Attention to Social Factors"; with Scotch, N., Journal of Chronic Diseases, 101. 15,

20. 103t-1067; 196:.

- ' ~h e r; ;;emi . :g:. c: Essential H7pertens 2n: A Re7:ew witH 5:ecial Attent;;r O

t2 sycne;;g1; .d 50tiacultural Factars: . S ic .c gic '!ecna nisms and D e s c r i p t i'7 e Epidemial. ,/ (with Scotch, N )", Journal af Chronic Diseases, le i . 10, pp. 1_31-1132; 1963.

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(12) "The Epidemiology of Essential Hypertension: A Review with Special Attention to Psychologic and Sociocultural Factors: II. Psychologic and Sociocultural Factors in Etiology"; with Scotch, N. ; Journal of Chronic Diseases, Vol. 16, pp. 1183-1212; 1963.

(13) "An Index of Symptom and Disease in Zulu culture Change", with Scotch, N.;

Hu=an Organization, Vol. 22, No. 4, pp. 304-311; Winter 1963-64.

(14) " Report on the Boston City Hospital and Boston Health Departnent", with Hamlin, R.E.; and Kisch, A.; Offset Monograph, 44 pages, Harvard School of Public Health, March 1965.

(15) " Administrative Reorganization of Municipal Health Services - The Boston Experience", with Hamlin, R.H. ; New England Journal of Medicine, 273: 26-29, 1 July 1965.

(16) " Tufts Comprehensive Community Health Action Progt . A Rural Southern and Northern Urban Comprehensive Teaching Health Center", Proposal to the Office of Economic Opportunity, February 1965; mimeo. , Deparrsent of Preventive Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine.

(17) " Challenge to the Professions", Proceedings of the Symposium on Catastrophic Illness, October 6-7, 1966, Cancer Care, Inc. of the National Cancer Foundation, New York.

(18) " Tufts in Miss'issippi - The Delta Health Center", Tufts Medical Alumni Bulletin, vol. 3, Nov. 1966, pp. 3-9.

(19) "Of the Poor 7 By the Poor, Or for the Poor: The Mental Health Implications of Social Control of Poverty Programs", Psychiatric Research Reoorts (21), American Psychiatric Association, April 1967, pp. 55-65; Reprinted in The Health Gao:

Medical Services and the Poor, R.L. Kane, editor; New York, Springer Publishing Companyr 19 76, pp. 86-98. ___

(20) "The Neighborhcod Health Center: Education of the Faculty in Preventive Medicine", Archives of Environmental Health, 14, 6 :912-916, June 196 7.

(21) " Health and Social Change: The Urban Crisis", The Lowell Lecture, Tuf ts-New England Medical Center, Feb. 13, 1968; Reprinted in Metrooolis in Crisis:

Social and Political Persoectives, 2nd edition, J.K. Hadden, editor; F.E.

Peacock Publishers, 1971, pp. 241-251.

(22) "Com=entary on D.K. Zschock, ' Economic Aspects of Health Needs in Colu=bia' in Social Sciences and Health Planning", The Milbank Memorial Fund Ouarteriv, Vol. XLVI, No. 2, Part 2, pp. 235-238, April 1968.

(23) " Medicine Must Help Cure Ghetto's Ills", editorial, Medical World News,

>by 10, 1968.

(26) " Health Center in Mississippi", Hosoital Frac: ice, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 68-81, Feb. 1969.

.c .J14S uenunuec;

,(25) " Impact of Ambulatory Health Care Services on the Demand for Hospital Beds, A Study of the Tuf ts Neighborhood Health Center", with Bellin, Seymour, Ph.D.

and Gibson, C.D. , M.D. , New England Journal of 'fedicine: 280: 803-812, April 10, 1969; reprinted as chapter in Neighbtchood Health Centers, edited by Robert M. Hollister, Bernard M. Kramar, and Seymour Bellin; Lexington, Massachusetts: Lexington Books, 1974, pp. 133-143.

(26) " Community Control - Or Com= unity Conflict?", chapter in Neighborhood Health Centers, edited by Robert M. Hollister, Bernard M. Kramer, and Seymour S.

Bellin; Lexington, Massachusetts: Lexington Books,1974 (27) "The Endlessly Revolving Door", in "The Sick Poor", American Journal of Nu rs ing , Vol. 69, No. 11, pp. 2436-2445, November 1969.

(28) " Actual Public Acceptances of the Neighborhood Health Center by the Urban Poor",

with Bellin, S., Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 214, No. 12, pp. 2147-2153; December 21, 1970; reprinted as chapter in Neighborhood Health Centers, edited by Robert M. Hollister, Bernard M. Kramer, and Seymour S. Bellin; Lexington, Massachusetts: Lexington Books, 1974.

(29) " Trends in Health Care Delivery Systems", with Coh.es, R.; Inauiry, Vol. VIII, No. 1, pp. 32-36; March 1971.

(30) " Hidden Professional Roles: The Physician as Reactionary, Reformer, Revolutionary",

Social Policy, Vol.1, No. 6, pp. 24-33; March-April 1971TT-(31) "The Impact of a Neighborhood Health Centerton Patients' Behavior and Attitudes Relating to Health Care", with Bellin, S.; sedical Care, Vol. 10, No. 3, pp.

224-239; May-June 1972; reprinted in The Health Gao: Medical Services and the Poor, R.L. Kane, editor; New York: Springer Publishing Company,1976, pp. 178-201; also reprinted in Neighborhood Health Centers, edited by Robert M. Hollister, Bernard M. KroMer, and Seymour S. Bellin; Lexington, Massachusetts:

Lexington Books, 1974.

(32) "The New Physician", chapter in The New Professionals, edited by Ronald Gross and Paul Osterman; Simon and Schuster, 1972, pp.95-116.

h (33) "A Health Center in Mississippi: A Case Study in Social Medicine", chapter in Medicine in a Changing Society, L. Corey, S.E. Saltman, M.F. Epstein, editors; St. Louis: C.V. Mosby Co., 1972, pp. 157-168.

l (34) " Slavery, 100 Years Later: and " Medical Services: Digging Wells and Building Privies", Statement before Subcommittee on Employment, Manpower and Poverty, Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, U.S. Senate, 91st Congress, 1969; reprinted in The Practice of Social Intervention: Roles, Goals and Strategies, F.M.

Loewenberg, and R. Dolgoff, editors; F.E. Peacock Publishers, 1972, pp. 46-51 and pp. 457-464.

(35) " Educational Implications in Changing Methods of Health Care Delivery", American Journal of Diseases of Children, Vol. 127, No. 4, Ap ril 19 74.

(36) " Health Services in the Concentration Camp: Prospects for the Inner City in the 1970's", chapter in The Urban Scene in the Seventies, J.F. Blumstein and E.L. Martin, editors; Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1974, pp. 145-173.

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. PU3LICATIONS (centinued)

-(37) "The Causes of Dehu=anization in Health Care and Prospects for Hu=anization",

chapter in Hu=anizine Health Care, J. Howard and A. Strauss, editors; New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1975, pp. 11-36.

(38) "The Illusion of Change", Social Poliev, Vol. 6, No. 3, November-December 1975, pp. 30-36.

(39) " Health Care in the People's Republic of China: Implications for the United States", chapter.45 in Medicine in Chinese Cultures: Comoarative Studies of Health Care in Chinese and Other Societies, edited by A. Kleinman, P.

Kunstadter, E.R. Alexander and J.L. Gale; Washington, D.C.: The John-E.

Fogarty International Center for Advanced Study in the Health Sciences, U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, 1975; DHEW Publication No. (NIH) 653, pp. 713-725.

(40) " Introduction", to Caring and Curing: Community Particioation in Health Services, by E.J. Salber, New York: Prodist, 19 75, pp. 1-3.

(41) "The Tasks of Community Medicine", The Sciences, New York Academy of Sciences, Vol. 13, No. 3, May-June 1976, pp 23-26.

(42) " Primary Care: Medical, Social and Political Processes", in Primary Care in Industralized Nations, Annals of New York Academy of Sciences, Vol. 310, 1978, pp. 37-39. -

(43) " Medical School Admissions; The Case for a Quota", with Sidel, V.W. ; Hastings '~

Center nieort, Institute of Society, Ethics and the Life Sciences, Vol. 8, No. 5, October 1978, pp. 18-20. -

(44) " China: The Search for Questions", with Sidel, V.W., The New Physicians, Vol.

28, No.1, January 19 79, pp. 54-55.

(45) " Preparing Primary Care Physicians for Practice in Underserved Inner City _ Areas",

Public Health Reports, Vol. 95, No. 1, January-February 1980, pp. 32-37.

l (46) " Addressing Apocalypse Now: The Effects of Nuclear Warfare as a Public Health Concern", American Journal of Public Health, Vol. 70, No. 9, pp. 958-961, September 1980.

(47) " Health Policy, Social Policy and The Health of the Aging", Generations, Journal l of the Western Gerontological Society, Spring 1980; reprinted in The Nation's i

Health, edited by Philip R. Lee, Nancy Brown and Ida Reed; San Francisco:

Boyd and Fraser Publishing Co.; 1981, pp. 389-395.

(48) "Small Futures, Sick Futures, Short Futures: Inequity and Irrelevance in U.S.

Health Care Strategies", Chapter 5 in Working for a Healthier Anerica, edited by Walter J. McNerny; Ca= bridge, Massachusetts: Sallinger Publishing Co., 1980, pp. 157-167.

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(49) " Agenda for the 80's: A Call to Action", The New Physicians, Vol. 30, No. 5, May 1981, pp. 22-26. ,

(30) "The Illusion of Survival", Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Vol. 37, No. 6, June-July 1981, pp. 16-20.

(51) " Affirmative Action in Medical School Admission", chapter in Troubling Problems in Medical Ethics: The Third Volume in a Series on Ethics, Humanism and Medicine, edited by Marc D. Basson, Rachel E. Lipson, Doreen L. Gaynos; New York: Allen R. Less, Inc., 1981.

(52) " Prognosis: The Illusion of Survival", chapter in The Final Eoidemic:

Physicians and Scientists on Nuclear War, edited by Ruth Adams and Susan Cullen; Chicago: Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 1981.

(53) "Why Survival Plans Are Meaningless", Hastings Center Reoort, Vol. 12, No. 2, April 1982, pp. 17-19.

(54) " Witness for a Nuclear Freeze", in Freeze! How You Can Helo Prevent Nuclear War, edited by Senators Edward M. Kennedy and Mark O. Hatfield; New York:

Bantam Books, April 1982, pp. 215-216.

(55) " Medical Effects of a Nuclear' Attack",' chapter in The Nuclear Almanac, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley Company, (in press). ,,

.(50) '" Community Health Centers: Health Care as an Instrument of Social Change",

chapter in Liberal Reforms in Medicine, edited by Ruth Sidel and Victor Sidel; New York: Pantheon Books, (in press).

(57) " Medical Effects of a Ndclear Attacx: Cities in the U.S.A.", chapter in Last Aid: The Medical Dimensions of Nuclear War, New York: W.H. Freeman-5 Co., A Scientific A=erican Book, (in press).

(58) " Hiroshima and Nagasaki: Reflections on Public and Professional Morality",

Journal of Public Health Policy, (in press).

(59) "The Limits of Health Care: How Much (Of What?) Is Enough (For Whom?)", The Hastings Center Symposium on Ethical Issues in Cost Containment, National l Center for Health Services Research, (in press).

l (60) " Boston City Hospital: A Memoir", in The Harvard Medical Unit at Boston City Hosoital, Vol. II, Autobiograohy, Boston: A Commonwealth Fund Publication of the Francia A. Countway Library of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, (in press) .

(61) "Other Voices, Other Rooms: The Meaning of Community-Oriented Primary Care in the A=erican Context", Proceedings of the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C., (in press).

l l

l L

( t ? m (Partial Listing)

(1) Review: "A Theory of Medical Ethics", Robert M. -Veatch, New York Times Scok Review, January 31, 1982, p. 11.

(2) Review: "The DNA Story: A Documentary History of Gene Cloning", J.D.

Watson and John Touze, Science '81, Vol. 2, No. 9, pp. 124-125, Nove=ber 1981.

(3) Op-Ed Colu=n: " Destruction: What One Warhead Would Do", San Jose Mercury News, San Jose, California, October 16, 1981.

(4) Revfew: " Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment", J.H. Jones, New York Times Book Review, June 21, 19 81, P . 9.

(5) Review: "The ?anda's Thumb", Stephen Jay Gould, Ph.D., New York Times Book Review, September 14, 1980, p. 7.

(6) Review: "The Broken Heart: Medical Consequences of Loneliness in America",

James J. Lynch, New York Times Book Review, July 10, 1977, p. 9.

(7) Review: "A Good Age", Alex Comfort, and "Prciongevity", Albert Rosenfeld, New York Times Book Review, November 29, 19 76, p. 5.

(8) Review: "The Body is the Hero", Ronald J. Glasser, M.D. , New York Times Book Review, September 5,1976, p.14.

(9) Analysis: "The New York Hospitals in Crisis", New York Times News of the Week in Review, August 22, 1976, p. 5.

(10) Cp-Ed Column: " Doctors for Everyone", New York Times, August 2,1976, with Victor W. Sidel, M.D..

(11) Review: " Medical Nemesis", Ivan Illich, New York Times Book Review, May 2,1976,

p. 1.

(12) Review: "American Medical Avarice", "The Great A=erican Medical Show", and j " Humanizing Health Care", New York Times Book Review, December 14, 1975,

p. 7.

! (13) Review: "Who Shall Live? Health, Economics and Socir' Choice", Victor R.

Fuchs, New York Times Book Review, March 2, 9' 7. 1.

(14) Review: "All God's Dangers: The Life of Nate Shaw", Theodore Rosengarten, New York Times Book Review, October 20, 1974, p. 1.

l l (15) Review: "31ue Cross" What Went Wrong?", Sylvia Law, New York Ti=es Book Review, l

June 23, 1974, p. 23.

(16) " Putting China's Medicine in Perspective", Medical World News, Vol. 14, No. 20, May 13, 1973, pp. 43-49.

(17) " China's Pragmatic Approach to Care", Medical World News, Vol. 14, No. 22, June 1, 1973, pp. 22-30.

l

(18) " Acupuncture Anesthesia: The Chinese Explanation", Medical World News,

.. Vol. 14, No. 27, July 13, 1973, pp. 551-61.

(19) " Auditing Cancer Research", Saturday Review, March 1962.

(20) "The Waking Sickness: African Health and Culture Change", Saturday Review, September 3, 1960.

(21) " Alcoholics Anonymous", New York Times Magazine, 1960.

(22) "The Doctor Shortage", _The Nation, January 23, 1960.

(23) " Immunity in Cancer: Progress Report XI, Sloan Kettering Iustituce for Cancer Research, New York, June 1958.

(24) "The Growing Pains of Science", Saturday Review, April 5,1958.

(25) "The Fifth Step: Nucleic Acid Research", Progress Report X, Sloan-Kettering Institute for Cancer Research, New York, June 1957.

(26) "The Patient as a Human Being", New York Times Magazine, December 2, 1956.

4 l

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(Partial Listing)

(1) "The Poor and the Professional: Who Takes The Handle Off the Broad Street Pump?", Special Session en New Partnerships in Delivery of Health Services, 94th Annual Meeting, American Public Health Association, San Francisco, California; November 1, 1966.

(2) " Nutrition and Economics in the Black Rural South", Symposium on Nutritional and Economic Problems of the Aged, 128th Annual Meeting, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Boston, Massachusetts; December 28, 1969.

(3) " Community and Health Professional Relationships in a Decade of Change",

Co==encement Address. Wavne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan, May 18, 1970.

(4) "The Future of Health Care Delivery", Mulholland Society Svmoosiun, University of Virginia Medical School, Charlottesville, Virginia; April 11, 1970.

(5) " Social Reform: Hidden Roles for the Health Professional", John Peters Annual Lecture, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, October 13, 1970.

(6) " Health Care and Health Centers: The Integration of Preventive, Curative, Environmental and Community Development Services", 14th Annual Lectureshio, American College of Preventive Medicine, Houston, Texas, Octber 28, 1970.

mA " Dilemmas of Health and Social Change", Annual Lectureship, Physicians Forum,

~

New York, October 19, 1971.

(8) "Beyond Health Care: Education for Community Medicine", New York Health Services Research and Policy Seminar, New York, February 1,1972.

~ ' ~ ~

T9) " Educational ChangeAnd Social Change: The Mandate of Community and Social Medicine", Keynote address, Milbank Memorial Fund Conference on Faculty Fellows in Social Medicine, Mexico City, February 26, 1972.

(10) " Health Professional in the Community", annual Harriet Cook Carter Lecture, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, April 7, 1972.

l (11) " Community Facilities or Community Institutions: Quality and Consumer Control",

32nd Annual Health Conference, New York Academy of Medicine, April 28, 1972.

(12) " Patient Care and the Union Member's Responsibility", 2nd Annual Health Conference, Local 1199, Drug and Hospital Union, National Union of Hosoital Emolovees , AFL-CIO,,

New York, May 20, 1972.

(13) " Health and the Social Order in the People's Republic of China", Center for Oriental Studies, Uni.arsity of Pennsvivania, November 16, 1973.

(li) " Primary Health Care in the People's Republic of China", American Academy of Family Physicians, Annual Scientific Sessions, Denver, October 2, 1973.

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.(15) "The Politics of Deprivation: Community Participation in Health Programs",

Special Lecture, Institute for Poliev Studies, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, October 25, 1973.

(16) "The Delta Health Center Experience: The People of the Community as the Most Valuable Resource", Medical Care Section, American Public Health Association 102nd Annual Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana, October 21, 1974 (17) " Organizing Communities for Change in Health: Implications of the Experience of the People's Republic of China", Committee on International Health, American Public Health Association, 102nd Annual Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana, -

October 21, 1974.

(18) " Social Values, Political Climate, National Health Insurance and the Health of the Poor", Medical Care Section Plenary Session address, American Public Health

_ Association, 102nd Annual Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana, October 22, 1974 (19) " Rural Health: Old Problems and New Solutions", The HEW Colloquium, Lecture series of the Department of Health, Education and WeLf are, Rockville, Maryland, February 7,1974.

(20) " Health Care Delivery Systems and Health Progress in Cuba", Symoosium on Cuba 1974 New York University Medical Center, New York, November 21, 1974.

(21) " Learning from the Developing Countries: The Training and Use of Rural Front-Line Health Workers in the Rural U.S. A.", 2nd Asian Congress on Agricultural Medicine and Rural Health, Teheran, Iran, April 16, 1975.

so- -

(22)_ " Psychiatry, Povertv and Social Change", the first annual Licha-Looez Memorial Lecture, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, May 26, 1976.

(23) " Organization and Effectiveness in Rural Health Delivery Systems", American Public Health Association, 105th Annual Conventione Washington, D.C., November 8, 1977.

(24) " Primary Care, Medical Education and the Crisis of the Cities", Annual Address, Section on Science and Public Poliev, New York Academy of Sciences, March 11, 1977.

(25) "Research and the Spectrum of Underserved Populations: Rural to Inner City",

Keynote address, Conference on Directions in Health Evaluation and Research, National Center for Health Services Research at Annapolis, Maryland, January 7,1978 (26) " Holistic Medicine and the Limits of Health Care: How Much (Of What?) Is Enough (for Whom?)", Conference on-Ethics and Health Cost Containment, Institute of Society, Ethics and the Life Sciances, at Arlington, Virginia, October 3, 1978.

(27) " Educating the New Community Practitioner", Health Poliev Advisory Committee Ferum, New York University Medical Center, March 13, 1978.

(28) " Interdisciplinary Education for the Health Professions", Spring Meeting, Association for the 3ehavioral Sciences and Medical Education, Lake Tahoe, Calif ornia, April 30, 1979.

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(29) "The Public Sector in Health Care Delivery: Model or Dinosaur", presented at the 107th Annual Meeting, American Public Health Association, November 5,1979.

(30) "Proble=s Confronting the New York City Hospital System: A Cecade of Denial",

presented at the 107th Annual Meeting, American Public Health Association, November 5, 1979.

(31) " Crisis in the Public Sector: Challenge to the Public's Health", Community Health Speakers Forum, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, January 31, 1980.

(32) " Chinese and Cuban Experiments in Health Care: Implications for the U.S.",

Institute on Health and Health Care, 3oston University, Boston, Massachusetts, May 28, 1980.

(33) " Medical Education and Community Medicine in the United States", Guest Lectures, Hadassah Medical School (Jerusalem), Haf 1 Medical School, Technion University (Haifa), Ben Gurion University Medical School _ (Beersheva) Israel, May 1-9, 1980.

(34) " Health Status of the Disadvantaged", Guest Lecture, National Blue Cross-Blue Shield Fellow's Seminar, Washington, D.C., April 25, 1980.

(35) " Acute Medical Problems Among the Survivors of a Nuclear Attack: Short and Intermediate-Term Effects", presented at "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War", a symposium sponsored by Harvard Medical School and Tufts University School of Medicine', Boston, Massachusetts, February 9,1980.

(36) " Acute Medical-Problems if Survivors in New York", presented at "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War", a symposium sponsored by Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and Albert Einstein Collene .of_ Medicine. New York, NY, September 27, 1980.

(37) "A One-Megaton Attack on San Francisco: Medical Implications", presented at ~

a symposium on "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War",

sponsored by the University of California / San Francisco School of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, and the University of California /

Berkelev School of Public Health, San Francisco, 'svember 17, 1980.

(38) " Medical Responses to Nuclear War: Technical and Ethical Considerations",

Seminar Series in Science, Technology and Society, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, October 28, 1980.

(39) " Affirmative Action in Medical School Admissions", Sixth Conference on Ethics, Humanism and Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan, November 8, 1980.

(40) " Health Care for One Billion People: Understanding China", 1980-81 Lecture Series on China, YM-YWEA, New York, New York, November 10, 1980.

I (41) " Community Change: Long-term Social Effects of a Rural Ccemunity Health Center",

Community Medicine Seminar, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, Connecticut, January 10, 1981.

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?MERS A ;D ._.C IRES PRESENTED AT SCIE:CIF;C A:a AC. Writ Mr.E.1:L i aura.ao 442) "The Danger of Nuclear War", Cooper Union Forum, New Yor'g, NY, March 9,1981.

(43) " Problems of Medical Care Following a Ther=onuclear Attack", paper presented at 1st Annual Congress, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Airlie House, Warrenton, Virginia, March 20, 1981.

(44) "The Ivory Tower and the Community", keynote address, National Convention, American Medical Student Association, Houston, Texas, March 26, 1981.

(45) " Medical Ef fects of Thermonuclear Weapons", Medical Grand Rounds, University _

of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, April 16, 1981.

(46) "The Mississippi Delta Project: Health Care as an Instrument of Social Change",

Special Seminar, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Washington, April 16, 1981.

(47) "A MIRV Footprint on Seattle: Medical Effects", presented at "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War", a symposium sponsored by the University of Washingto'n School of Medicine, and The Washington Scace Medical Association, Seattle, Washington, April 18, 1981.

(48) " Social Responsibility sud the Physician's Connitment", Commencement Address, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, May 17, 1981.

(49) " Health Centers and Rural Health", Seminar on Rural Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, May 18, 1981.

(50) " Community-Based Health Care", presented at a symposium on " Social Medicine:

The Continuing Agenda", sponsored by Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Rockefeller University, New York, NY, May 28, 1981.

(51) " Acute Medical Problems of Survivors", presented at a symposium on "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War", sponsored by Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago Medical School, Loyola Universitv Stritch School of Medicine, Rush Medical College, University of Illinois School of Public Health and College of Medicine, Chicago, IL, June 19, 1981.

(52) " Nuclear War and the Illusion of Survival", presented at the 1981 Monadnock Summer Lyceum, Peterborough, NH, July 19, 1981.

(53) " Survival Af ter Nuclear Attack", Arms Race Alternatives Symposium, Columbia Universi',;. New York,, NY, September 23, 1981.

(54) " Acute Medical Problems Among Survivors of a One-Megaton Attack on Albuquerque",

presented at a symposium on " Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War", sponsored by the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, New Mexico P + 11e uenith Association and the Navaio Health Authoritv, Albuquerque, NM, Septe=ber 25, 1981.

r .u :. r.:. .w c. u . = r .e.m. . w .c . :.:c 2 : x .a .w;m. .:.r. . u m ieontin.ec-(55) " Medical Effects of the Neutron Bomb", presented at a symposium on the Neutron Bomb, sponsored by Physicians for Social Responsibility, Coooer Union, New York, NY, October 12, 1981.

(56) " Medical Aspects of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War", Special Lecture Series, The New School for Social Research, New York, NY, October 27, 1981.

(57) " Fatalities, Injuries and Medical Effects of a Thermonuclear Attack on Los Angeles", paper presented at a symposium on "The Medical Effects of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War", sponsored by the UCLA Schools of Medicine, Nursing __

and Public Health, the UCSD School of Medicine, UC Irvine School of Medicine, and Loma Linda University School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California, October 31, 1981.

(38) " Medical Consequences of Nuclear War", Medical Care Section, A=erican Public l Health Association,109th Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, California, November 2,1981.

(59) " Community-Oriented Primary Care", Medical Care Section, American Public Health Association, 109th Annual Meeting, Los Angeles, California, November 5,1981.

(60) " Nuclear War as a Public Health Challenge", Clasing Plenary Session Address, American Public Health Association,109th Annus1 Meeting, Los Angeles, CA, November 5,1981.

(61) "Eff ects of a Thermonuclear Attack on Salt Lake City", presented at a Conference on "The Health Effects of Nuclear War", sponsored by the University of Utah College of Health Science's, The Utah' State Medical Association, and tha Utah State Deoartment of Health, Salt Lake City, November 7, 1981. ,s (62) "A Thermonuclear Attack on New York City", Grand Rounds, Department of Pediatrics and Social Medicine, Montefiore Hosoital and Medical Center, Bronx, New York, November 11, 1981.

(63) " Acute Medical Problems of Survivors of Nuclear Explosions", presented at a symposium on "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War",

sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Hahnemann Medical College, Jefferson Medical College, and Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, November 14, 1981.

(64) " Medical Implications of a Nuclear Attack on Toronto", presented at a symposium l on "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War", sponsored l by the Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada, December 5, 1983

(65) " Bio-ethical Implications of Nuclear Weapons", Grand Rounds, Department of Community Medicine, Mt. Sinai Medical School, New York, NY, January 27, 1982.

(66) " Neighborhood Health Centers: Retrospective and Prospects for. the Future",

Area Health Education Center Symposium, University of Connecticut Medical School, Farmington, Connecticut, January 23, 1982.

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(67) " Measuring the I= pact of Funding Cuts: Data on Clients and Communities",

Annual Address, Caoitol Region Com= unity Council, Hartford, Connecticut, January 28, 1982.

(68) " Medical Consequences of Nuclear War", Special Lecture, The University of Illinois Medical Center, Chicago, IL, February 3,1982.

(69) " Professions, Goals and Lives", Lecture Series in Science, Medicine and Humanities, Rush Medical School, Chicago, IL, February 3,1982.

(70) " Effects of a One-Megaton Airburst Over Chicago", Grand Rounds, Department of Pediatrics, University of Chicago Medical School, Chicago, IL, February 3,1982.

(71) "The Physician as Social Activist", Lecture sponsored by Medicine and Society, Harvard Medical Schoot, Boston, Massachusetts, February 11, 1982.

(72) " Nuclear Disarmament", a lecture sponsored by Cornell University and the Tompkins County Nuclear Weapons Freeze Camoaign, Ithaca, NY, February 17, 1982.

(73) " Health Implications of the Reagan Budget", annual meeting, Tomokins County Comorehensive Health Planning Council, Health Systems Agenev, Ithaca, NY, Feb ruary 18, 1982.

' (74) " Issues in Health Policy: The Threat of Nuclear War", Guest Lecture at the School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, Feb ruary 22, 1982. ,

(75) "The Arms Race and the Threat of Nuclear War", symposium sponsored by the Public Health Research Institute of New York, New York University Medical Center, February 24, 1982.

(76) " Medical Consequences of Nuclear War", Grand Rounds, Department of Medicine, Montefiore Hosoital and Medical Center, Bronx, NY, March 1, 1982.

(77) " Community-Oriented Primary Care: Definition and History", Core Paper, Conference on Community-Oriented Primary Care, Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, Airlie House, Warrenton, VA, March 9, 1982.

(78) " Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons", Special Lecture, School of Medicine, University of California / Davis, Sacramento, California, March 17, 1982.

(79) " Preventing Nuclear War", presented at a Public Health Meeting on Nuclear War, California Decartment of Health Services, Sacramento, CA, March 17, 1982.

(80) " Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons", Special Lecture, American River College, Sacra = ento, CA, March 18, 1982.

(81) "Co=munity-Oriented Primary Care", Guest Lecture, University of California School of Public Health, Berkeley, CA, March 19, 1982.

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,(82) " Thermonuclear War As A Medical . Issue", Special Lecture, Department of Medicine, Cook County Hosoital, Chicago, IL, March 24, 1982.

(83) "The Effects of Nuclear War on the Countries of Europe: Su= mary Statement",

Second Annual Congress, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, Cambridge, England, April 7, 1982.

(84) "Coczmunity-Orienced Primary Care: Epidemiology in Neighborhood Health Centers",

symposium of the Department of Community Medicine, Northwestern University School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, April 14, 1982.

(85) "NiIclear War and Medical Problems", Grand Rounds, Department of Medicine, Northwestern University School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, April 14, 1982.

(86) "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Accidents and Nuclear War", 63rd Annual Session, American College of Physicians, Philadelphia, PA, April 20, 1982.

(87) "The Fallacy of Civil Defense: A Medical Perspective", Special Lecture, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio, April 21, 1982.

(88) " Acute Medical Effects of a Nuclear War", presented at a symposium on "The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons *nd Nuclear War", sponsored by the George Washington University Medical Center and the Foundation for Advanced Education in the Sciences, Washington, DC, May 11, 1982.

(89) " Medicine and Nuclear War", Conference e Science, Medicine and the Politics of Nuclear Armament, sponsored by Slor setterine Institute, Memorial Cancer -

Center and Cornell University M dica' ,ollege, New York, NY, May 20, 1982. -

(90) -"NuclearNild,C6113efense si y :al Ethics", Plenarv Session Address, Canada West Medical C_ entre aver, B.C., May 30, 1982.

(91) " Acute Medical Prol- . lear Attack on San Diego", symposium on "The Medical Conse Auclear War", sponsored by the Office of Continuing Educa-- .aursity of California / San Dieeo School of Medicine, San Diego, CA, 1982.

(92) " Medical Art , Civil Defense", Grand Rounds, Department of Medicine, Long Island Je g Hosoital, Nassau County, NY, September 10, 1982.

(93) " Moral Responsibilities of Physicians and Students", presented at a Conference on "Containing the Nuclear Threat", sponsored by Rutgers Medical School, Piscataway, NJ, September 11, 1982.

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(Partial Listing)

(1) Testimony on Medical Consequences of a Thermonuclear War, Subcommittee on Health, United States Senate, Hearings on Civil Defense, Washington, D.C., March 6, 1980.

(2) The Foreign Policy and Arms Control Implications of Strategic Force Modernization Proposals, Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, Washington, D.C., Nov. 9, 1981.

(3) " Surviving a Nuclear Attack: The Myth of Civil Defense", Background Series Session, Nongovernmental Organization Committee on Disarmament, United Nations, New York, NY, January 19, 1982.

(4) Statement before a Public Meeting on the Introduction of the Kennedy-Hatfield Freeze Resolution, American University, Washington, D.C.,

March 10, 1982.

(5) Testimony on Medical Aspects of Crisis Relocation, Joint Legislative Forum, House and Senate Health Committee, California State Legislature, Sacramento, California, March 17, 1982.

(6) Testimony on the Medical Consequences of a Nuclear Attack on U.S. Cities, Armed Services Committee, U.S. House of Representatives, Ad Hoc Hearings on '

The Implications of the Military Budget, Washington, D.C. , March 31,-1982.

> (7) Statement before the Military and Civil Defense Subcommittee, New York State Assembly, on the impact of'a nuclear attack on New York State and New York City, April 19, 1982.

(8) Addresses to House and Senate Staff Meeting, United States Congress, U.S.

Capitol, and an invitational briefing on The Medical Consequences of Nuclear Weapons and Nuclear War, United States Senate, sponsored by Physicians for Social Responsibility and Council for a Liveable World, Washington, D.C.,

May 2, 1982.

(9) "A Medical Analysis of Crisis Relocation", Statement before the Committee on Environmental Protection, City Council, City of New York, June 9, 1982.

(10) Testimony on Civil Defense before the Public Safety Committee, Boston City Council, hearings on Crisis Relocation Planning, Boston, Massachusetts, l June 24, 1982.

l

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s (1)

"Out in the Rural: A Health Cancer in Mississioci", produced for Tufts University School of Medicine and the North Bolivar County Health Council, 1970; Foto-Kew Laboratories, Los Angeles, California.

(2) "The Last Eoidemic: Medical Consecuences of Nuclear Weacons and Nuclear Wa r ',' Espact Productions, Resource Center for Non-Violence, Santa Cruz, California, 1981.

PUBLIC EDUCATION ACTIVITIES (Partial Listing)

(1) Interview on Nati'onal Public Television Network, "The Nuclear Freeze Rally:

A Su= mary", WNET-TV, New York, June 12, 1982.

(2) Interview on BBC World Service Series, " Surviving the Bomb", British Broad-casting Corp., London, June 3, 1982.

(3) Interview on Civil Defense on " Assignment: Science", West German National Television Network, June 1982.

-(4) Interview and Panel Discussion on The Arms Race and Civil Defense, The David Susskind Show, Independent Television Network, New York, April 24, 1982.

(5) Interview on Civil Defense, "New York, NY", Public Television Network, WNET-TV, New York, April 19. 1982.

(6) Discussions of Nuclear Weapons, West German Television Network, March 11, 1982, East German (GDR) Television Network, May 11, 1982; BBC-TV, London, England, April 7, 1982.

(7) Canadian National Television and National Film Board of Canada, Seminar with Medical Students on Medical Aspects of Nuclear Arms, New York, April 2, 1982.

(8) Interview on Effects of Nuclear Weapons, CBS Morning News, CBS National Television Network, New York, April 1, 1982.

(9) Interview and Discussion on Civil Defense, The McNeil-Lehrer Report, National Public Television, WNET-TV, New York, March 2,1982.

(10) Discussion / Interview on Co=munity Health Centers and Medical Care in the South, "All Things Considered", National Public Radio, February 25, 1982.

(11) Interview on Civil Defense, " Night Line", ABC Television Network, January 14, 1982.

(12) Interview on "The Threat of Nuclear War", " California Times", California Council for the Humanities, California Public Radio Network, Dece=ber 17, 1981.

(13) Interview on Medical Ef fects of Nuclear Weapons, " Tomorrow Show", NBC National Television Network, New York, October 15, 1981.

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P"FLIC 770CATIOS V'TI'lITT FS (centinued)

^

(14) Discussion and interview on Civil' Defense, " Common Ground", National Public Radio Network, September 23, 1981.

(15)_ Interview on Effects of Nuclear Weapons,. CBS Television Series, "The Defense of America", Part One., June 14, 1981.

(16) Interviews .on Nuclear War and Civil D'ef' nse, e WOR-TV, New York, March 25, 1982' and May 19, 1981.

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' .m 1949 - 50 Student research project with Dr. Nathaniel Kleitman, Department of Physiology, University of Chicago' Medical School, on the physiology of sleep and fatigue.

1954 - 55 Student research project, " Mechanism of Metastasis in the Ehrlich Ascites Tumor", with Dr. E. E. Ecker, Institute of Pathology, Western Reserve University.

1955 - 56 (Sc=mer) Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts,

" Comparative Studies in Hemolysis of Human Erythrocytes", with Dr.

- A.K. Parpart, Department of Biology, Princeton University.

1956 - 53 M.D. thesis project, " Medical Education and Cultural Determinants of Health and Illness", with Dr. T. Hale Ham, Division of Medical Education, School of Medicine, Western Reserve University.

1957 Studies in social and medical pathology and culture change in urban and rural Zulu populations, with Dr. Sidney Kark, Professor of Social Medicine, University of Natal Medical School, Durban, Union of South Af rica, at the Lamontville and Pholela Health Centers.

1959 - 62 Research in the Department of Preventive Medicine, Harvard Medical School:

(1) Studies in Physician-Patient Relationships: The Choice and Use of Physicians by families; (2) Determinants of the Quality of Medical Per-formance by Physicians; (3) Determinants of Choice of Career and Hospital Training by Physicians, with Dr. Osler Peterson, Visiting Professor of Professor of Preventive Medicine; (4) Studies of the Effects of Nuclear

-- Weapons and Medical Responses to Nuclear Attack.

.1960 - 62 (Part-time) Chief Consultant, NIMH-Harvard School of Public Health Cross-Cultural Survey of Social Factors in the Etiology of Disease (Hypertension, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Schizophrenia).

1963 - 64 Development of a Portable Electronic Device for Recording Blood Pressure In Epidemiologic Surveys, with Dr. Edward H. Kass, Harvard Medical School, and Professor Eric Mollo-Christenson, M.I.T.

1965 - 71 (1) Proposed the Neighborhood Health Center program to the Of fice of Economic Opportunity; designed and implemented the first OE0 health center grants (for programs in urban Boston and rural Mississippi);

(2) Assisted in draf ting amendments to the Economic Opportunity Act (1966) creating the OE0 Office of Health Affairs and authorizingtoand thefunding the Director, national neighborhood health center network; Consultant OEO, the Assistant Secretary for Health, H.E.W. , and the Subco=mittee on Health, U.S. Senate, on regulations, implementation and policy; (3) Planned, budgeted and directed an urban co=munity health center with an annual budget of $1.3 million and a staff of approxi=acely 100, and a rural community health center with a budget of $3.5 million, a staff of more than 200, and major program components in medical care, nutrition, and environmental sanitation, com= unity organization, health education, health careers training;

- RESEARCH, EDUCATION, PRCCRAM DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTEATICN (continusc)

(4) Designed and supervised evaluation research on:

medical care utilization by poverty populations; impact of health centers on medical care utilization and on other providers of care; change in health attitudes, knowledge, behaviors and hospital utilization by inner-city and rural low-income populations; co=munity organization in urban and rural populations; health team development and use of paraprofessionals in primary care; (5) Designed and supervised pre-clinical and clinical clerkships and related teaching programs in community medicine at urban and rural health center sites for students in medicine, public health, social work, environmental engineering, law and urban planning; 1

(6) Initiated and shared academic direction of a special program at Tuf ts University School of Medicine for the recruitment, selection, and academic support of severely educationally disadvantaged rural and inner-city medical students; (7) Initiated, funded (from governmental and foundation sources), and directed health center programs in which more than 90 local disadvantaged minority students receiv ad academic support, remediation, assistance and placement in programs ranging f rom high school equivalency certifi-cation, L.P.N. certification, Registered Sanitarian and other technical certifications, to successful completion of baccalaureate, R.N., law, M.D., M.S.W. and Ph.D. degrees.

1971 - 77 Initiated and chaired (1971-73,1976-77) a Department of Community Medicine, with 14 faculty lines, at a new medical school; responsible for the development of community medicine courses and programs and for community medicine teaching in other schools of the Health Sciences Center; assisted in the planning and development of a ' university-related suburban Health Maintenance Organization, and in the planning of ambulatory care for a new university teaching hospital; Executive Committee, Curriculum Committee, Admissions Co=mittee, School of Medicine, State University of New York at Stony Brook.

1978 Director of a program (equivalent to a department) in community medicine, with 9 full-time, 5 part-time and more than 20 adjunct faculty lines and and annual budget of approximately S500,000, in a unique 6-year medical school oriented toward urban primary care. Administratively responsible for development of Primary Care Clinical Campuses and field teaching at more than 50 community sites, as well as for co=munity medicine teaching over four years of the curriculum. Executive Committee, Admissions Committee, Task Force on Curriculum Revision (Chairperson), Curriculum Committee, Academic Steering Committee, School of Biomedical Education, City College of New York.

. 3 iu i * (L i l4 3 .Ju.

V IC TOR _ _ _W.,ji I DEJ,, M . D .

Chairperson, Department of Social Medicine Montefiore Medical Center Professor of Community Health Chairperson, Department of Community Health (West Campus)

Albert Einstein College of Medicine Mailing Address: Department of ' Social Medicine, Montefiore Medical Center 111 East 210th St., Bronx, NY 10467, 212-920-5508 Education: Princet'on University, A.B. cum laude (physics) 1949-1953 liarvard 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 Trnining and Peter Benc Brigham Hospital, Boston, Mass.

Professional Intern in Medicine 1957-1958 Appointments: Junior Assistant Resident in Medicine 1958-1959 National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Majyla~nd -

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 Peter Bent Brigham Hospital Senior Assistant Resident in Medicine 19.61-1962 Biophysical Laboratory, Harvard Medical School,

. ~B6s Eon Instructor in Biophysicc, Harvard University 1962-1964 Advanced Research Fellow, American Heart Association 1962-1964 Junior Associate in Medicine, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital 1962-1966 Consulting Physician in Medicine (Child Health Division) and Internist, Family Health Care Program, Children's Hospital Medical Center 1963-1966 Member, Massachusetts Commission on Radiation Protection 1963-1964 L

- 1 Chief, Preventive Medib'ine Unit "

1 .'6 4 - l '.% 7 Annociate in Preventive Medicine, Harvard 1964-1967

. Medical School 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 Follow, 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, MHMC 1969-Professor, Community Health (Social Medicine), AECOM 1969-Consulting Physician, Department of Social Medicine, Morrisania City Hospital 1969-1976 Associate, University Seminar on Social and Preventive Medicine, Columbia University 1970-Chairperson, Anbulatory Medical Care Audit Committee, MHMC 1971-Chairperson, Institutional Review Board for i Protection of Human Subjects, MHMC 1972-Visiting faculty member, Program in Health, Medicine '

and Society and Department of Community Health and Social Medicine, School of Biomedical Education, City,-

College, City University of New York 1973-Honorary Att.ending Physician, Department of Ambulatory Care, North Central Bronx Hospital 1976-1

8 E .. n u r i.-rs o in I.  : it International US-USSR !!calt.h Exhan<je Visitor 1967 ftedical Care Study Visit 1978 3reat Britain, Norway, Sweden, Denmark-Study Year 1967-1968 People's Republic of China--Invitation of Chinese Medical Association 1971,1972,197 1980, 1982 Republic of Chile -

Chilean Ministry of Health 1973 Academy of Christian Humanism 1979 Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam)--Representative of Medical Aid to Indochina 1974 Republic of Cuba--Invitation of Cuban Ministry of Health 1978 World Health Organization Consultant, Adviser (Geneva) 1969,1974,197 Consultant (Malaysia) 1974 Consultant (Western Pacific Regional Office- Manila)

, 1974

~~

Scandinavian School of Public Health (Goteborg), Visiting Professor 1975,1976,197 1981 Editorial Boards Hospital Practice 1966-and Editorial Consultantships Postgraduate Medicine 1969-The New Physician 1971-1975 International Journal cd[ Health Services 1971-1979 Update International 1972-1974 American Journal cd[ Drug and Alcohol Abuse 1973 1981 American Journal cf Chinese Medicine 1975-Forum cn1 Medicine (American College of I

Physicians) 1978-1980 Journal of Prison Health: Law, Medicine, Corrections, and Ethics 1980-Journal o_f_ Latin Community Health 1980-Journal of Public Health Policy 1982-i

I F I;5 Q, . o]y;, , , .

Current Society American Public Health Association (Fellow, 1970; Memberships and Member, various Councils and Committees, 1968- ;

Fellowships Governing Council, 1978- , Nominating Comm., 1979-81; Chairman, Nominating Committee, 1980-81)

Association of Teachers of Preventive Medicine International Epidemiological Association New York Academy of Medicine (Member, Committee on' Medicine in Society, 1970- ) .

New York Academy of Sciences Physicians for Social Responsibility Vice-Chairman 19,66-69: Member, National Advisory (board, 1979-  ; Member, Board of Directors, 1982- )

Physicians Forum (Chairperson, 1971-72; Member, Board of Directors, 1969- )

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

Society for Health and Human Values Current Advisory Board, Occupational Health Media Project, Oil Memberships on Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union Advisory and Othnr Boards Advisory Committee, Coalition for a National Health Service _

Consultant, Project on Low-Income Consumers, Consumers Union of the United States Medical Care Evaluation Subcommittee, Bronx Professional Standards Review Organization Advisory Committee, Bronx Community College Advisory Board, Continuing Medical Education,

. New York Botanical Gardens National Advisory Board, National Senior Citizens Education and Research Center Recent Honors Recipient, Sarah L. Poiley Award of the New York Academy of Sciences for " Outstanding contributions toward improvement in the general health of the population", 1978 Commencement speaker, School of Medicine, University of California--Davis, 1981

, s PUBLICATIONS

1. Sidel, V.W. , and Solomon, A.K. : Entrance of water into human red cells under

.In~ 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 af ter 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.

7. Aronow, S., Ervin, F.R., and Sidel, V.W. (eds.): The Fallen Sky: Medical Consequences of Thermonuclear War. New York: Hill and Wang, Inc., 1963.
8. Oski, F. A. , Nathan, D.C. , Sidel, V.W. , and Diamond, L. K. : Extreme hemolysis and red-cell distortion in erythrocyte pyruvate kinase deficiency. I.

Morphology, erythrokinetics and family 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. Na than, D.C. , Oski, F. A. , Sidel, V.W. , and Diamond , L.K. : Extreme hemolysis and red cell distortion in erythrocyte pyruvate kinase deficiency. II.

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

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 14y 195-199, 1966.

~

13. Sidel, V.W. and Bonnano, R.A.: Immunization survey of personnel at the Massa-l 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.
15. Nathan, D.G., Oski, F.A., Sidel, V.W., and Diamond, L.K.: Studies of erythrocyte

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

16. Sidel, V.W.: Medical aspects of civil defense. pp. 53-75. In Ey ring, H. , ed. ,

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

o __ _ _

17. Goldwyn, R.M. and Sidel, V.W.: Chemical and biological weapans 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. , Sid el, 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 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. : Na palm. 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.
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. 68,: 716-717, 1968.

.: .fr

  • - 7
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. Sid el, 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.
42. 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 Weapons.

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.

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 1_0: (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-Crofts, 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.

3-

  • 49. Wegman , D.G. , Schoenbaum, S. C. , and S ideL V.W. : Pilot application of a teaching technique in social medicine. Journal of Medical Education: 44:

1017-1023, November, 1969.

50. Sidel, V.W.: The feldsher in the USSR. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 166: 957-966, December, 1969.
51. Sidel, V.W.: Editorial: Hospital on view. New Eng. J. Med. 282: 279-280, 1970.
52. Koch-Weser, J. , Sidel, V.W. , Federman, E.G. , Kanarck, P. , Finer, D.S. , Eaton, A.E. :

Adverse effects of sodium coif stimethate. Annals of Internal Medicine 72,:

857-868, June, 1970.

! 53. Sidel, V.W. :- Foreword: Community and social medicine. Postgraduate. Medicine.

47,: 128-129, June, 1970.

54. Sidel, V.W.:,ed. : Sociogenic health and disease: Welfare failure leads to drug poisoning. The New Physician: 19,: 923-925, Novembe r , 1970.
55. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: Puerto Rican culture, illness, and espiritism. The New Physician: 20,: 24-27, January, 1971.
56. Sidel, R. , and Sidel, V.W. : Blood Giving and National Character. Review of The Gift Relationship by Richard Titmuss. Social Policy 1,: No. 6, 62-63, March-April, 1971.
57. Sidel, v.W.; ed.: Sociogenic health and 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, V.W.: Proposed National Health Insurance Programs:

Impact on the Consumer. In Eilers , R. , and Moyerman, S. , eds. , National Health Insurance. Homewood, Illinois: Richard D. Irwin, Inc. , 1971.

59. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic. health and disease : House staff rotations lead to fragmented hospital care. The New Physician: 20,: 399-402, June, 1971.
60. Sidel, V j{. , ed. : Sociogenic health and disease: Jail for the child who needs

, help. ine New Physician: 20,: 537-542, August, 1971.

61. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health and disease: Attempts to help a 14-year-old heroin user. The New Physician: 20: 584-586, September, 1971.
62. Sidel, V.W.: New technologies and the practice of medicine. In Mendelsohn, E.,

Swazey, J. , and Taviss , I. , eds. , Human Aspects of, Biomedical Innovation.

Camb ridge, Mass : Harvard University Press, 1971.

63. Koch-Weser, J., Sidel, V.W., Dexter, M. , Paris , C. , Finer, D.C., Kanarek, P.:

Adverse Reactions to Sulfisoxazole, Sulfamethoxazole, and Nit rofurantoin.

Archives of Internal Medicine: 128: 399-404, 1971.

7 e

_9_

64. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic health 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 bu rning. 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, V.W.: Human Services in the People's Republic of Ch ina. Social Policy 2,: 25-34, March / April, 1972. (Reprinted in Peopic's China: Social Experimentation, Politics, Entry onto the World Scene, 1966 through 1972. Edited by David Milton et al. New iork:

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 2].: 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 2].: 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 2J.: 364-367, June , 19 72.
75. Sidel, V.W.: Medical personnel and their training. In Quinn, J.R. , ed. ,

Medicine and Public Health in the People's Republic of China. DREW Publica-

_ tion No. (NIH) 72-67, June, 1972.

76. Jonas , S. , O' Dwye r, E. , Zendel, J. , Sidel, V.W. : Ambulatory heroin detoxifica-tion' in municipal hospital. New York State Journal of Medicine 72,: 2099-2105, August, 1972.
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.

    • -m l

L

= -

93. Sidel, V.W., ed.: Sociogenic IIcalth and Disease: Meningitis: The Pat ient ,

the Mother and the Doctors. The New Physician 22: 438-439, 448, July, 1973.

94. _Sidel, V.W.: Medical Care: Playing Politics with IIcalth. Pp.58-83 in What Nixon Is Doing To Us. Alan Cartner, Colin Greer, and Frank Riessman, eds.

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

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

American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 43: 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 in the People's Republic of 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 22: 656-658, October, 1973.

i 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-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 27: 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,.V.W.: Health Services in the People's Republic of China. Pp. 103-127 in Medicine and Society _ irt 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[: 425~429, 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 HealthI Education, and Welfare, _

l Publication No. (NIH)75-684, 1974.

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

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

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

Soclal Iss'ues Resouices Series', 19 76) '

i

( 105. S_id.el, i V.W., ed.: Sociogenic Health and Dise'ase: The Patient Injured by Medical Care: Whose Responsibility? The New Physician 23: 62-64, November, l 1974.

I

106 Aranoff, C., a nd S i,de l,,,j!_ ' ',. - Dita ou, Ion i n C.i:.e s t udies in Bioethics:

An IUD and the Question of Safety. The Hastings Center P g rt. Vol. 4, No. 6: 13, Decembe r, 1974.

107. Drucker, E. , and Sidel, V.W. : The Communicable.sDiseajic Model of Heroin Addiction: A Cri,tique, Amer _ J. Drug and Alcohol Abuse 1: 301-311, 1974.

(Also, Sidel, V.W. and Drucker, E: Letter: Further 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 24, (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 on New Health Practitioners in 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' C.S." Kart, eds, Reading, MA: Addison-

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

of Health Workers and Labor *Conflict, Farmingdale, N.Y.:' Baywood Publish'ng i 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. '

(Reprinted, in revised form, in China's Road' to Development, Neville Maxwell, editor. Oxford: Pergamon Press,1978) . <

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 Univer.sity Press, 1975.

116. Sidel, V.W. Quality for Whom? Ef fects of Professional Responsibility for Quality of Health Care on Equity. Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine: 52:'164-176, January, 1976.

117. Sidel, R., and Sidel, V.W.: Health Care in China's Cit ies. New York Affairs 3: 42-53, Winter, 19 76.

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

Amer,1cana, 1976. _

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. 6-18, May, l'J 76. (i'e;,r inted in !:c.ilt h , Vol m e 1, ;L i . 4 'J , C . i t '. .. rA o i g ,

Maryland: Social Issues Research Series, l976 ; and I:3 The Tatlon's :!.at h, Philip R. I.ee, Nancy Brown, and Ida Red, editors, San Francisco: Coyd &

Frase r Publishing, Co. , 1981.)

120. Sidel, V.W, and Sidel, R.: Scif-Reliance and the Collective Good:

Medicine in China. Pp. 57-75 in Ethics and Health Policy, R.M. Veatch and Ray Branson, editorm. Cambridge, Mass: Ballinger Publishing Co.,

1976.

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

AMS Press, L9 76.

122. Sidel, V.V., and Sidel, R.: Beyond Coping. Social ' Policy _ 7('2):67-69, Sept.-Oct., 1976 123. Sidel, V.W., and Sidel, R.: Cood Health Begins at Home. Parents' m' Magazine 51 (11): 60,87-90, November, 1976.

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

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

c, 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 86 :617-625, - May? 19 77.

126. Sidel, V.W. and Sidel, R.: Primary Health Care in Relation to Socio-Political Structure. Social Science. and Medicine ,1J:415-419;,Aprib.1977.

127. Drosnes's , D.L., Jonas, S., and Sidel', V.W.: The Delivery of Health Care.

Chapter 21 in Practice of Medicin'eiVol. 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 Perspective on the Crisis in U.S. Medical Care. New York: Pantheon Books, 1976.

(Chapters reprinted in The Sociology ojf Health and Illness: Critical Perspectives, Peter Conrad and Rochelle Kern, editors, N.Y. : St. Fhrtin's Press, 1981.)

130. Sidel, V.W.: Special Presentation: Who Does Primary Care? Personnel ,

Selection and Training. Primary Health Care in Industrialized Nations, Annals of the New York Acaders of Sciences 310: 188-192, 1978.

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

132. _Sidel, V.W.: The Right to !!calth Care: An International Perspective.

Pp. 341-50 in Bioethics and liuman Ri:; hts: A_ Reader _ for !!calth_ Pro-fossionals. Elsie Bandman and Bertram Bandman, editors. Boston:

Littic, Brown and Co., 1978.

133. Kindig, D.A., Sidel, V.W., and Birnbaum, I.: National ifcalth Insurance for_ Inner City Underserved Areas: General Criteria and Analysis of a Proposed Adninistrative Mechanism. Pp. 60-75, 82 in Effects of,the Payment Mechanism on the Health Care Delivery System. DilEW Publication No. (PIIS) 78-3227.~~kashington, D.C.: National Center for IIcalth Ser-vices Research, Department of !!calth, Education and Welfare, 1978.

134. Greifinger, R.8., and Sidel, V.W.: Career Opportunities in Medicine.

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

liarper & 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., an/ Sidel, V.W.: Medical School Adnissions: The Case for a Quota. Hastings Center Report 8 (no. 5): 18-20, 1978.

137. Sidel V.W., and Sidel, M.: Biomedical Science and War. Pp. 1699-1704 in Encyclopedia of,Bioethics. Warren T. Reich, editor. New York: The Free Press (Macmillan), 1978.

138. Sidel V.W.: Social Values, Health, and University Response. Pp. 42-57 in The Future of, Academic Community Medicine in, Developing Countries.

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

139. Solon, L.R., and Sidel, V.W.: Editorial: llealth 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: Nuc1 car Power and Health, 91:315, Aug., 1979 and Risks of Nuc1 car Power, 92:125-6, Jan., 1980) (Reprinted in Mark Reader, editor, Atom's Eve: Ending the Nuclear Age. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1980).

140. Geiger, H.J. , and Sidel, V.W. , editors : Special issue of The New Ph9sician:

f

" China: Are There Lessons for Our Western Medicine?," Vol. 28, No. 1, January, 1979. (Including Geiger, H.J. , and Sidel, V W. , Epilogue: The Search for Questions, Pp.54-5).

141. Sidel, R., and Sidel, ".W.: Visiting China's IIcalth 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.

142. Sidel, V.W., and Sidel, R.: Medical Care in Sweden: Planned Pluralism.

Social Channe.. 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., and Sidel, R.: Organization of Health Services in the Peopic'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., Pp 296-314.

144. Sidel, V.W.: Public 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 of 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. Quarterly Review of, Biology 54 (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 Jou rnal, Fall 1979, pp. 10-15 151. Bloomgarden, Z. and Sidel, V.V.: Evaluation of Utilization of Laboratory.

Tests in Hospital Emergency Room. American Journal of Public Health 70 (5): 525-528, May, 1980 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 Affairs, 1980.

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

Princeton, N.J.: Are te - Publishing Co. , 1980.

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 Liebe rman, and Alice Sarde11, editors., Le xi ng ton, Ma ss . : Lexington Books, 1981, pp. 175-184.)

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155. Sidel, V.W.:~

lleal tli Care: Prices Up', Dist ribution Still Unfair.

Democ ra t ic Le f t, 8(8) : 7-10, Oc tobe r , 1980.

156. Sidel, V'.W.: The Department of S'ocial 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 llealthier America, Walter J. McNerney, editor. Cambridge, MA:

Ballinger Publising Co., 1980.

158. Sidel, R. and Sidel, V.W. : Revolutionary Optimism: Models of Commitment to Community from Other Societics. 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 the University of Vermont), 1981.

15C San Agustin, M., Sidel, V.W., Drosness, D.L., Kelman, H., Levine, H.,

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

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

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

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

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 on Nuclear War, Ruth Adams and Susan Cullen, editors. Chicago: Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science, 1981.

163. Sijel, V.W. and Sidel, R.: All Self-Care is Not Solipsistic But Selective Citation Surely Is: A Reply to Kat7 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. Pp. 317-326 in Hospital-Based Ambulatory Care, Emil Pascarelli, ed i to r. New York: Appleton-Century Crofts, 1982 (in press).

I 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--

Medical Association 247(4):481-483, 1982.

166. Sidel, V.W.: Structure and Organization of Primary Care in International Perspective. Pp. 19-35 in Primary llealth Care: More Than Medicine.

Englewood, New Jersey: Prentice-liall, Inc., 1982.

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167. 'Sidel , R. , and S.idel , V.W: The llealth ot China: Current Conf 1icts in Medical and lluman Services for One 15illIim Peopla. Boston: !!eacon 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. Pp. 24-53 in Whar Reagan is Doing to Us, Alan Cartner, Colin Creer, and Frank Riessman, editors. New York: Harper and Row, 1982.

171. Belmar, R., Drucker, E., Michaels, D., and Sidel, V.W.: The Export of Health Activism: A Remedy for the Export of Hazardous Industry.

Pp. 88-93 in Exportation of Hazardous Industries, Products, and Technologies to Developing Countries, Jane Ives, editor. Cincinnati, OH: Nation.1 Institute for Occupational Safety and Health,1982.

172. Sidel, V.W.: Asklepios and Zeus. Harvard Medical Alumni Bulletin 56(3):30-32, Summer, 1982.

173. Sidel, V.W.: Editorial: Medical Care in China: Equity vs. Modernization.

American Journal of Public Health 72(11):1224-1226, November, 1982.

174. Sidel, V.W.: The Effects on Health and Health Care of Expenditures son Arms. Humanities in Society, 1983 (in press).

175. Sidel, R. , and Sidel, V.W. : A Healthy State: An International Perspective on the Crisis in United States Medical Care (revised edition).

New York: Pantheon Books, 1983 (revision of #129 and publication of paperback edition, in press).

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O Abstracts:

A.1 Solomon, A . K. , Sidel, V.W., and Paganelli, C.V.: Pore dimensions in the red cell membrane. Proceed _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 Earicy, L. E. , Sidel, V.W., and Orloff, 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.

Bunow, P.F. , Katchalsky, A. , and Solomon, A.K. : Measurement A.5 Sidel, V.W.,

Biophysical Society of thickness of unstirred layer at red cell surface.

Abstracts (Eighth Annual Meeting), Chicago, 1964.

A.6 a.athan, D.G. , Oski, F.A . , Sidel, V .W. , and Diamond , L.K. : The significance of erythrocyte crenation in the pathology of hemolytic anemias. J. Clin.

Inv es t . 4_3_:

3 1260, 1964.

Osmotic properties of the human Sidel, V.W., Savitz, D., and Solomon, A.K.:

A.7 erythrocyte. Clinical Research 12,: 231, 1964.

Sidel, V.W., and Knowles, J.H.:

Differences between ward and private medical A.8 patients at the Massachusetts General Hospital. Clinical Research 13; 344, 1965.

Sidel,V.W.,Greenes,R.d.,Barnett, G.O., and Knowles, J.H.: Computer-based A.9 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.

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

Clinical Research 14j 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.

l Clinical Research 15; 342, 1967.

A.12 Sidel, V.W., Mansfield, P., and Jefferys, M.:

Medical practice in the urban - -

core: Survey of G.P. 's in the London Borough of Camden. Clinical Research 17: 411, 1969.

A.13 Kindig, D.A., and Sidel, V.W.: Method f or analysis of proposals for national health insurance. Clinical Research 19: 502, 1971.

Finkelberg, Z., Kindig, D.,

A.14 Starrett, B., Besses, G., Kuebler, T., McCloy, S.,

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

Clinical Research 19,: 505, 1971.

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e A. 15 Jonas , S. , O' Dwye r , E. , Zende l, J. , and S ide l , V.W. : Sho rt-t e rm an.bulatory heroin detoxification using methadone. Clinical Research 20: 474, 1972.

A. 16 Mallory, G. , Rubenstein, L. , Drosness, D. , Kleiner, C. , and Sidel, V.W.: Evaluation of factors responsible for delay in 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 China. Abstracts of the Annual theting of the American Public Health Association, 82-83, 1972.

A.18 Sidel, V.W.: The participation of people in health care . in the People's Republic of China. Abstracts of the Annual Meeting 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'l San Agustin, M., sidel, V.W., Drosness, D., Kelman, H., Levine, H., and

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 Agustin, 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 Rubens tein , L. , Mates , S . , and S idel, 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 Care 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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