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Health Effects of Energy-Generating Sources

W. W. Schaefer, MD
JAMA. 1979;241(7):693-694. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03290330013009.
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To the Editor.—  In December 1976, the American Medical Association House of Delegates called for an evaluation of the health effects of various energy-generating sources on the employees of industry and the general public. The House of Delegates requested that fossil fuels, nuclear fission, and alternate energy-generating sources be included in the study. The AMA COUNCIL ON SCIENTIFIC AFFAIRS responded by producing a report, "Health Effects of Energy-Generating Sources" (240:2193, 1978), which has provided a new breath of hope to a dying nuclear industry. Though the report was approved by the House of Delegates in 1978, the study makes comparisons between the most hazardous use of coal and the most favorable use of nuclear fission.Only three sources of basic statistics are used in the report to develop conclusions, and all three of these sources have been spawned in the nuclear and electrical utility industry. This report itself identifies the

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