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Epidemiology in the Courtroom

In the early 1970’s, Ward Stephenson a pioneering Texas lawyer used the epidemiologic research done by Dr. Irving Selikoff and colleagues to prove that his client’s asbestosis and mesothelioma was caused by a 33-year exposure to Johns-Manville’s asbestos products. The landmark case of Borel v. Fibreboard Paper Products Corporation et al. marked the beginning of a new role for epidemiology, one that is increasing in importance in the courtroom today. (1) According to Christoffel and Teret, a computerized search of judicial opinions in each of the years 1970 to 1973 showed the words “epidemiology,” “epidemiological” or “epidemiologist” appearing three or fewer times. (2) By 1990, there had been a 30-fold increase in opinions mentioning epidemiology.

“Toxic torts,” as this area of law is known, is responsible for ushering epidemiology into the courtroom. Traditionally, the concerns of tort law (governing when one party must pay compensation for harm caused to another) are with injuries for which the cause and effect association is evident (e.g., a fall on a slippery floor) and for which eyewitness testimony or a physician’s opinion is sufficient to establish causation. In toxic tort litigation (encompassing complex disputes arising out of exposures to toxic substances, e.g., dioxin, Agent Orange, low- level radiation, asbestos and certain pharmaceuticals), the plaintiff attempts to prove that some activity or product of the defendant produces injury or disease. Unlike traditional tort cases, the causal relationship between the exposure and the disease is not readily evident and it is the role of epidemiology to provide a causal explanation. While this role is one that epidemiologists are comfortable with professionally, it may create quixotic results when subjected to courtroom scrutiny.

Where Epidemiology and the

Legal System Diverge

The outcomes of these cases often leave the epidemiologic and scientific community puzzled because the results seem irreconcilable with what is “known” about a given cause and effect relationship. The problem is that epidemiology and the legal system operate from completely different premises. Epidemiol-ogists see their research as pieces of evidence in a search for “truth” that is always subject to change.

The legal system’s function is to resolve disputes fairly and finally. In other words, if one considers scientific research to be a “movie,” the epidemiologist is concerned with every twist of the plot, while the legal process operates to “freeze” a frame. Both professions may be dissatisfied with the results: the epidemiologist sees distortion and an incomplete picture; the lawyer is frustrated with the perpetual stream of probabilistic answers. Bear in mind that epidemiology deals with categories of risks rather than individual biological causation. Then consider that the courts want answers in terms of individuals—Did this defendant harm this specific plaintiff? The result is often lack of communication and misunderstanding on both sides.

Future columns will explore legal issues of interest to epidemiologists and will give you an inside look at what happens when epidemiology enters the courtroom. We will explore such issues as the impact of protective orders, scientific vs. legal causation, scientific vs. legal standards of proof, and the epidemiologist as expert witness. Impatient readers are referred to the chapter on legal cases in EpiSource which covers some of these topics and many others.

References

1. 493 F. 2d 1076 (1973)

2. Epidemiology and the Law: Courts and Confidence Intervals, American Journal of Public Health, 81:1661-1666, Dec. 1991.

Published March 1992  v

 

 
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