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William Jamieson Nicholson
Pioneer of Science, Sensitive Human, Touchstone for Integrity

     April 9th, while jogging near his home in fair lawn, New jersey, William J. Nicholson, PhD, suffered heart failure. A life-long athlete, he was 70 years old. An officer and a founding member of the Board of The Ramazzini Institute, Dr. Nicholson was Professor Emeritus in Community and Preventive Medicine at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, New York.
     Nicholson pioneered, with his close friend and mentor the late Irving J. Selikoff, the integration of the basic biological, physical and mathematical disciplines required to clearly define the causes and course of environmental disease. While he is best known for his work in establishing with Dr. Selikoff the full impact and need for control of asbestos-related disease, he also was a leader in the description and control of vinyl chloride, ionizing radiation, pesticides and other toxic agents.
     His work relating disparate data, much of which he generated himself, from air monitoring, epidemiology, toxicology, clinical medicine, and control technology was recognized for its extraordinary high level of technical and analytical competence in the United States and worldwide. Coupled with his reputation for unshakeable personal honesty and sensitivity, he became a much sought-after witness in the courts and before legislative and regulatory bodies. Often shy and always self-effacing, the impact and breadth of his work is largely unrecognized. He was the author of the petition for the first permanent standard set under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, for asbestos, submitted by the Industrial Union Department of the AFL-CIO.
     With Dr. Henry Anderson, now a Wisconsin State Health Department Deputy Commissioner and then serving part of his residency in Occupational and Environmental Medicine at Mt. Sinai on assignment to the Industrial Union Department, Nicholson successfully linked existing control and health effects data in part gathered by the Mt. Sinai team. Trusting his judgment, the unions led by Peter Bommarito, a Vice President of the Industrial Union Department and President of the rubber and plastics workers union, pressed for technically feasible, stringently lower levels of vinyl chloride gas in the work and community environments. This position prevailed in the OSHA and EPA rulemaking process, withstood multiple court challenges, and actually aided profitable growth in North America and Europe for the plastics industry.
     Nicholson was a trusted arbiter on the ethical interpretation of controversial research data. It was this innate moral sense that brought him in partnership with Selikoff. In the late ‘60s, he was a candidate in the primary for the congressional seat centered in Ridgewood , NJ, where Selikoff lived. Selikoff’s late wife Celia ran an afternoon fundraiser for him in the Selikoff home. In the course of being introduced, some disparaging personal remarks were made about his opponents. Nicholson’s sense of fairness led him not only to talk about the social issues with which he was deeply concerned, but also to defend his opponents. He lost the primary, but helped to change the political climate in the district. In the next election, his friend Andrew McGuire won the primary and went on to win the seat. The night of the fundraiser, after Mrs Selikoff told Dr. Selikoff what had occurred, Selikoff telephoned Nicholson and convinced him to leave a post at Columbia University for a position in Selikoff’s laboratory.
     Faced with a rising tide of questionable research used to perpetuate the hazards of asbestos, he worked with Selikoff to provide positive incentives for better research through joint efforts of unions, corporations and environmental health scientists in government and academia. He and Selikoff were the hosts at the luncheon in the Cosmos Club in Washington at which The Ramazzini Institute was born.
     Nicholson was quintessentially sensitive to the needs of others. This writer remembers him working nearly around the clock in a screening of asbestos miners in Copperopolis, California. More workers had appeared for examination than expected, mostly in the evening. Mrs. Selikoff , as “Director of Queueing,“ had been on her feet almost unrelieved for 14 hours. Her feet and ankles were badly swollen. She took her shoes off and kept working. Seeing this, Bill, who did most of the work history interviews, quietly took his own shoes off.
     “Are your feet swollen,” I asked? “No,” said Bill, “ I just don’t want Celia to feel alone!”
     When you were with Bill, you were never alone.

Sheldon W. Samuels


     The Ramazzini Institute for Occupational and Environmental Health Research is an institute-without-walls, founded by the late Dr. Irving J. Selikoff to help scientists and educators work together in research, in communicating with each other, and in assisting decision makers from industry, labor, government and the environmental movement.

     Dr. Selikoff created a Fund to help explore how the advances in human genome research could help workers and their families. For a short description, click on Selikoff Fund. Full information on research the Fund promotes is in Genes, Cancer and Ethics in the Work Environment. The Institute is registered in the state of Maryland as an IRS 501[c]3 charity.

     The Institute is not a membership organization, operates no facilities, and tries not to duplicate the resources of other institutions. We avoid serving as an applicant organization for grants or contacts, choosing instead to function through members of our board and their institutions. The board is composed of researchers and educators who work together to do what each would find more difficult to do alone.

     Some of the projects we have worked on in the last twelve months:

  • Developed working relationships with support groups for those who suffer from genetic diseases.
  • Continued monitoring the social factors in the Department of Energy’s [DOE] medical surveillance program for beryllium-exposed workers. A report on this work will be published in The Human Ecology of Chronic Beryllium Disease in our publication series.
  • Partnered with the Amarillo [Texas] Metal Trades Council in the Amarillo Health Project, to serve former and active workers and their families employed at DOE’s Pantex nuclear weapons facility.
  • Assisted New York University become an National Cancer Institute Early Detection Center [Dr. William Rom, Principal Investigator.] The Center will serve asbestos-exposed workers in New York City and the Amarillo Health Project [Dr. Arthur Frank, University of Texas Health Center, Co-Investigator.]
  • Continued to study stresses that for centuries have resulted in high rates of suicide and parasuicide among miners and their communities in the Rocky Mountains and in the Ore Mountains of Central Europe.
  • Developed a model for ethical research that involves genetic testing and therapy, but protects both the “research subject” and our progress toward an Open Society.

The Institute is registered in the state of Maryland as an IRS 501[c]3 charity.


Institute Officers and Directors

President: Arthur C. Upton, MD, Clinical Professor of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

Vice President: Sheldon W. Samuels, Director Emeritus of Health, Safety and Environment, Industrial Union Department, AFL-CIO

Treasurer: William Nicholson, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Community Medicine, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine

Directors: Michael Flynn, President, CREST, International Association of Machinists

Arthur Frank, MD,. PhD, Professor of Medical Education and Cell Biology and Environmental Sciences, University of Texas Health Center at Tyler

Antonio Giordano, MD, PhD, President, Sbarro Institute, Jefferson College of Medicine

Ivan Gut, MD, PhD, DSc, Center of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases, Czech Institute of Public Health

Philip J. Landrigan, MD, DIH, Professor and Chair, Director of Community Medicine, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine

 Tor Norseth, MD, PhD, Senior Toxicologist, Norwegian Occupational Health Institute

Knut Ringen, DrPH, MHA, MPH, Consultant

William Rom, MD, MPH, Professor and Director, Division of Pulmonary Medicine, New York University School of Medicine

Hans-Joachim Woitowitz, MD, PhD, Professor and Director, Institute for Occupational And Social Medicine, Justus Liebig University of Giessen, Germany

Charles Xintaras, DSc, Environmental Health Scientist, Athens, Greece

 


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