Alvin S Glicksman

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Alvin S Glicksman was a Radiologist who worked for the tobacco industry through Brown University in Rhode Island, and also through the Roger Williams General Hospital. He was an associate and member of a dubious research team put together by Theodor D Sterling, mainly at the Simon Fraser University who did dozens of relatively useless research projects for the Ad Hoc Committee of the tobacco industry. These were run by the lawyers to keep the documents from legal discovery.

He worked both with Theodor D Sterling himself, and also with the two sons, Elia Sterling and David A Sterling, who had become the Assistant Professor, Environmental Health Program, College of Health Sciences, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia.

Documents & Timeline

1992 May 14 Theodor D Sterling and David A Sterling and their associate Arvin S Glicksman, who was a Radiation Oncologist from the Medical Sciences Department at Brown University (Rhode Island) are proposing a tobacco-funded project investigating the risks associated with passive smoking by family members in the home. David Sterling is now Assistant Professor, Environmental Health Program, College of Health Sciences, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia.

They have a different hypothesis that they want to investigate -- associated with the socio/economic status of households-- which makes the non-smoking members of the family more exposed to carcinogens from many sources. Glicksman and David Sterling have been doing a preliminary analysis of possible studies between the years 1989 and 1991. They did a feasibility study at Roger Williams General Hospital and a population survey with a (unspecified) grant from British American Tobacco (presumably finished in 1991.

This new study rests on the confounding observations: a) lower-class blue-collar workers have non-smoking wives b) the blue-collar workers bring more toxic materials into the home on their clothes. c) Home-makers generally have elevated lung-cancer rates. d) The wives of non-smokers appear to have a healthier lifestyle. [2]