Big Tobacco knew radioactive particles in cigarettes posed cancer risk but kept quiet
Tobacco companies knew that cigarette smoke contained radioactive
alpha particles for more than four decades and developed "deep and
intimate" knowledge of these particles' cancer-causing potential, but
they deliberately kept their findings from the public, according to a
new study by UCLA researchers.
The analysis of dozens of previously unexamined internal tobacco
industry documents, made available in 1998 as the result of a legal
settlement, reveals that the industry was aware of cigarette
radioactivity some five years earlier than previously thought and that
tobacco companies, concerned about the potential lung cancer risk, began
in-depth investigations into the possible effects of radioactivity on
smokers as early as the 1960s.
Friday, September 30, 2011
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