American Decades
Smoking and Cancer
The Government Examines Smoking.
While scientists and physicians were generally convinced of the link between cancer and cigarettes by the early 1960s, the government was not. Political pressure from congressmen representing states where tobacco was grown delayed a Public Health Service report on the subject. In 1962 President John F. Kennedy asked U.S. Surgeon General Luther L. Terry to resolve the matter. Terry appointed a committee of ten, including three cigarette smokers, one cigar smoker, and one pipe smoker to review the findings of others rather than conduct their own research. Over a period of nearly two years committee members pored over eight thousand articles in the National Medical Library in Bethesda, Maryland. During the course of the inquiry Terry, who smoked cigarettes when the study started, switched to a pipe.
The Results.
The report of the surgeon general was presented in the auditorium of the...
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1960's Medicine and Health
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Care Questioned
- A Changing Tradition
- Foreign Doctors
- Government Health Programs
- Heart Surgery: the Artificial Heart
- Heart Surgery: Coronary Artery Bypasses
- Heart Surgery: Endarterectomy
- Heart Surgery: Resuscitation
- New Methods: Cryosurgery
- New Methods: Home Dialysis
- New Methods: Portable Ekg
- Organ Transplants and Limb Reimplantation
- The Polio Sugar Cube
- "Routine Illness": Measles
- The Rubella Epidemic
- Sex in the 1960s: Abortion
- Sex in the 1960s: Artificial Insemination
- Sex in the 1960s: The Birth-Control Pill
- Sex in the 1960s: Fertility Drugs
- Sex in the 1960s: Giving Birth
- Sex in the 1960s: Lippes Loop
- Sex in the 1960s: The Male Pill
- Solid Proof: Cancer Spreads
- Smoking and Cancer
- Sugar Substitutes
- Thalidomide: Global Tragedy
- Triparanol and Chloramphenicol
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Awards
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Medicine and Health, 1960–1969
