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Stallones Gives Address at SER

Remarks Are One of Meeting’s Highlights

“If the decision were mine the hog farmers of the country could use all of the antibiotics they might wish to make the pigs grow. The risk to humans looks to me to be so small, much smaller than riding a train to the top of the mountain, or boarding the plane at the Salt Lake City airport. Many people do not agree with this, and I have come to accept, somewhat painfully, that not everyone who disagrees with me is venal, or prejudiced, or stupid.” In characteristic disarming style, Reuel Stallones, Dean of the University of Texas School of Public Health at Houston, gave the invited address at the 14th annual meeting of the Society for Epidemiologic Research.

As chairman of a special panel constituted to design a definitive study on the possible human health effects of feeding sub-therapeutic doses of antibiotics to animals, Stallones chronicled his involvement with what turned out to be a very complex imbroglio between science and politics. The panel concluded that no adequate studies of the problem could be carried out. “That came as a revelation to me,” said Stallones. “I have a mystical belief in the power of epidemiological methods.”

Based on this experience, Stallones went on to address the group about the use of epidemiologic or scientific data in the formulation of public policy--an increasing preoccupation among epidemiologists. That this is not always a gratifying process was amply documented in his talk, and he had some insights to offer. “This problem (sub-therapeutic doses of antibiotics) is being addressed the same way a  lot of our other insoluble societal problems are addressed by collegial actions taken on our behalf by people who have the responsibility to make decisions based on ignorance.” Although he urged his listeners to view this fact with equanimity, he argued against passivity. “A scientist may declare that the data are inadequate for decision making but the policy maker has no such fence to straddle.”

The neutral position cannot exist, he stated: “In this realm of health protection, failure to take action is not a neutral position, but represents a positive decision to do nothing.” And in what may well be the most amusing yet insightful quote from his talk, Stallones jibed, “There is a law, not often recognized, clearly stated here for the first time, The Conservation of Public Policy, which states that public policy can neither be created nor destroyed, but only changed from one form to another.”

Published July 1981 


 

 
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