The Collegium Ramazzini is an independent, international academy composed of physicians, scientists, and scholars from 35 countries. Through its members and activities, it seeks to advance occupational and environmental health by bridging scientific knowledge with socio-political centers that have the responsibility to protect public health. [1] The organization is named after physician Bernardino Ramazzini (1633–1714), known as “the father of occupational medicine.”
The Collegium Ramazzini is governed by an elected executive committee composed of a president, secretary general, treasurer, and six other fellows. Four individuals have served as the academy’s president: Irving J. Selikoff, MD (1982–1992); Eula Bingham, PhD (1993–1997); Phillip J. Landrigan, MD, MSc (1998–2021); and Melissa McDiarmid, MD, MPH, DABT (2022 to present). The organization's by-laws allow for 180 active fellows with an unlimited number of emeritus fellows.
Dr. Cesare Maltoni and Dr. Irving J. Selikoff founded the Collegium Ramazzini in 1982. [2] Their goal was an organization of physicians and researchers with expertise in the present and emerging risks associated with exposures to health hazards in workplaces and the environment. Maltoni’s research on the carcinogenesis of vinyl chloride, benzene, and other chemicals, [3] [4] [5] and Selikoff’s on the health effects of exposure to asbestos, [6] [7] [8] motivated their vision of a precautionary approach to the use of industrial chemicals.
Maltoni and Selikoff sought input from Morris Greenberg, MD; [9] Myron Mehlman, PhD; and Sheldon Samuels to recommend individuals to be members of the Collegium Ramazzini. Sixty four physicians and scientists from 16 countries composed the inaugural class of fellows. They were Nicholas Ashford, PhD (Cambridge, MA, US); Emilio Astolfi (Buenos Aires, Brazil); Maths Berlin (Lund, Sweden); Jean Bignon (Creiteil, France); Patricia Buffler, PhD (Houston, TX, US); Jorge Chiriboga, MD (San Juan, Puerto Rico); Thomas W. Clarkson (Rochester, NY, US); Morton Corn, PhD (Baltimore, MD, US); Massimo Crespi, MD (Rome, Italy); John Finklea, MD (Birmingham, AL, US); Vito Foa, MD (Milan, Italy); Arthur L. Frank, MD, PhD (Lexington, KY, US); Joseph F. Fraumeni, Jr., MD (Bethesda, MD, US); Luigi Giarelli, MD (Trieste, Italy); Giangiacomo Giordano (Naples, Italy); Bernard Goldstein, MD (Piscataway, NJ, US); Antonio Grieco, MD, PhD (Milan, Italy); J.S. Harington (Johannesburg, South Africa); Bo Holmberg, PhD (Solna, Sweden); Kaye H. Kilburn, MD (Los Angeles, CA, US); Marvin Legator, PhD (Galveston, TX, US); Ruth Lilis, MD (New York City, US); Andrew Maguire (Washington, DC, US); Cesare Malton (Bologna, Italy); Renzo Mattiussi (Milan, Italy); Rene Mendes, MD (Washington, DC); Franklin Mirer, PhD (Detroit, MI, US); Norton Nelson, PhD (New York City, US); Diogo Pupo Nogueira, MD (Sao Paulo, Brazil); Giuseppe Paladini (Bologna, Italy); Edward P. Radford, MD (Pittsburgh, PA, US); Elihu Richter, MD (Jerusalem, Israel); Hiroyuki Sakabe, MD (Japan); Sheldon Samuels (Washington, DC, US); Irving J. Selikoff (New York City, US); Charlie Hammel Smith (Chicago, IL, US); Kenzaburo Tsichiya, MD (Japan); Arthur C. Upton, MD (New York, US); Enrico Vigliani (Milan, Italy); Ian Webster, MB, ChB (Johannesburg, South Africa); and Bernard Weinstein, MD (New York, NY, US).
Selikoff and Maltoni served as the organization's first president and secretary general, respectively.
In 1983, the Collegium held its first meeting of fellows along with an international conference on the health effects of benzene. Speakers included Maltoni, Mehlman, Maths Berlin, MD and Marvin S. Legator, PhD; future fellows Bo Holmberg, PhD (National Board of Occupational Safety and Health, Sweden) and Peter Infante PhD (Occupational Safety and Health Administration, US); as well as other scientists from academia, governments, and petrochemical companies. Papers from the conference were published in a 1985 edition of the American Journal of Industrial Medicine.
The Collegium Ramazzini holds an annual scientific meeting in October that is called “Ramazzini Days.” It is an opportunity for fellows to present new research and discuss emerging issues in the context of the current socio-political environment. The meeting, which is open to the public, is held in the Castello dei Pio in the city of Carpi, Italy, which is the hometown of Bernardino Ramazzini. Beginning in 2006, the agendas for the scientific program have been published on-line and abstracts available since 2020.
The Collegium Ramazzini publishes policy statements on pressing environmental and occupational health issues. The statements describe the scientific evidence of harm and the need for policy action by nations and the global community. Since 1984, the Collegium has published 28 policy statements addressing topics such as asbestos, endocrine disruptors, COVID-19, and scientific integrity.
The Collegium Ramazzini bestows several awards to recognize an individual's achievement and service to advance knowledge and protection of occupational and environmental health. The Ramazzini Award is bestowed to a "scientists deemed by the Collegium to have made outstanding contributions to furthering the aims of Bernardino Ramazzini in safeguarding public health". [10] The awardees to-date have been:
The Irving J. Selikoff Award and Lecture is given to "an internationally recognized scientist or humanist whose studies and achievements have contributed to the protection of workers' health and the environment". [12] Awardees to date have been:
The Collegium Ramazzani has functioned as an initial publication source for some scientific papers later re-published in additional peer reviewed journals. [13] The Collegium Ramazzani has also published editorials through its presidents and collectively in peer-reviewed scientific journals including calls for an international ban on asbestos in 1999, [14] 2005, [15] 2010 [16] and 2012; [17] the war in Darfur; [18] and control of pesticide use in the European Union. [19]
A repetitive strain injury (RSI) is an injury to part of the musculoskeletal or nervous system caused by repetitive use, vibrations, compression or long periods in a fixed position. Other common names include repetitive stress injury, repetitive stress disorders, cumulative trauma disorders (CTDs), and overuse syndrome.
Asbestosis is long-term inflammation and scarring of the lungs due to asbestos fibers. Symptoms may include shortness of breath, cough, wheezing, and chest tightness. Complications may include lung cancer, mesothelioma, and pulmonary heart disease.
Bernardino Ramazzini was an Italian physician.
David Platt Rall was a cancer specialist and a leader in environmental health studies, whose work in environmental health helped turn it into a scientific discipline. Rall also advanced public health and prevention. He directed the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences from 1971 to 1990, year in which he retired. His work on toxicology and carcinogenesis was recognized by his appointment as the first director of the National Toxicology Program in 1978. He held the rank of Assistant Surgeon General in the United States Public Health Service. He also chaired the World Health Organization's Program on Chemical Safety.
The International Commission on Occupational Health (ICOH) is an international non-governmental professional society, founded in Milan during the Expo 1906 as the Permanent Commission on Occupational Health.
Eula Bingham was an American scientist, best known as an Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health (OSHA) during the Presidency of Jimmy Carter. During her tenure as the head of OSHA, she eliminated more than 1,000 pedantic regulations and shifted the agency's focus to health and safety risks, establishing strict standards for workers' rights to know about their exposure to hazardous substances.
Joseph LaDou, was an occupational and environmental medicine physician who practiced in Silicon Valley during the early years of the semiconductor and computer industries. In 1983, he was appointed the first Chief of the University of California, San Francisco (MC) Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, and was co-director of the residency program there from 1982-1991. LaDou was founding editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health, serving in that capacity from 1992 to 2005. During the same years, LaDou was director of UCSF's International Center for Occupational Medicine.
Irving J. Selikoff was a medical researcher who in the 1960s established a link between the inhalation of asbestos particles and lung-related ailments. His work is largely responsible for the regulation of asbestos today. He also co-discovered a treatment for tuberculosis.
Philip John Landrigan, is an American epidemiologist and pediatrician. He has campaigned against substances in the environment that are harmful to children, such as lead and asbestos. He is also concerned with environmental pesticides.
Paul James Lioy was a United States environmental health scientist born in Passaic, New Jersey, working in the field of exposure science. He was one of the world's leading experts in personal exposure to toxins. He published in the areas of air pollution, airborne and deposited particles, Homeland Security, and Hazardous Wastes. Lioy was a professor and division director at the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Rutgers University - School of Public Health. Until 30 June 2015 he was a professor and vice chair of the Department of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, Rutgers University - Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. He was deputy director of government relations and director of exposure science at the Rutgers Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute in Piscataway, New Jersey.
Stephen M. Levin was the medical director of the Mount Sinai Irving J. Selikoff Center for Occupational and Environmental Medicine, a professor of occupational medicine at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, and the co-director of the World Trade Center Worker and Volunteer Medical Screening Program. A graduate of Wesleyan University and then New York University School of Medicine, Levin was born and raised in Philadelphia to working-class parents; his father was a carpenter, his mother a hospital worker. He was recognized worldwide as a leader in the field of occupational medicine, particularly due to his work on behalf of 9/11 workers and those injured by asbestos in the town of Libby, Montana.
Lorenzo (Renzo) Tomatis was an Italian physician and experimental oncologist who researched carcinogenesis and its primary prevention
Sibte Hasan Zaidi was an Indian pathologist and toxicologist born in April 1918. He underwent training in pathology at the Hammersmith Hospital in London, United Kingdom and later returned to India to continue with experimental toxicology research.
The New York and New Jersey Education and Research Center is one of eighteen Education and Research Centers funded by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). The NYNJERC was established in 1978.
Occupational epidemiology is a subdiscipline of epidemiology that focuses on investigations of workers and the workplace. Occupational epidemiologic studies examine health outcomes among workers, and their potential association with conditions in the workplace including noise, chemicals, heat, or radiation, or work organization such as schedules.
The Mount Sinai Selikoff Centers for Occupational Health are a set of occupational and environmental health clinics that focus on the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of workplace injuries and illnesses. Significant injuries and illnesses that are treated at the clinical centers include occupational lung cancers, manganese/silica/lead exposures, and asbestos-related illness, which was the career-long research of Dr. Irving Selikoff, the centers' inaugural director. The Selikoff Centers for Occupational Health's multidisciplinary health care team includes physicians, nurse practitioners, industrial hygienists, ergonomists, social workers, and benefits specialists, who are "leaders in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of workplace injuries and illnesses," and provide comprehensive patient-centered services in New York City and Lower Hudson Valley. The clinical centers are located within the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai under the Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.
Dennis J. Paustenbach PhD, CIH, DABT, is an American scientist, businessman, researcher, and author. Dennis is currently President of Paustenbach and Associates, which is a consulting firm who uses risk assessment techniques to characterize occupational and environmental health hazards. He is the founder and former president of ChemRisk, a consulting firm specializing in the use of toxicology and risk assessment to characterize the hazards of chemicals in soil, air, water, food, sediments and consumer products. He was, for about 4 years, a Group Vice-President of Exponent. He has been criticized for ChemRisk's role in serving the Pacific Gas and Electric Company in a case involving contamination with hexavalent chromium, which later became the basis for the film Erin Brokovich.
William N. Rom is the Sol and Judith Bergstein Professor of Medicine and Environmental Medicine, Emeritus at New York University School of Medicine and former Director of the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine at New York University and Chief of the Chest Service at Bellevue Hospital Center, 1989–2014. He is Research Scientist at the School of Global Public Health at New York University and Adjunct Professor at the NYU Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. He teaches Climate Change and Global Public Health and Environmental Health in a Global World.
Mark Richard Cullen is a physician, scholar, and population health scientist known for his work in occupational medicine. As a professor at Yale and later Stanford University, his research focused on the social, environmental, behavioral and bio-medical determinants of morbidity and mortality in adults, with special emphasis on the role of workplace’in such matters.
Melissa Perry is an American epidemiologist and microbiologist, who is the inaugural dean of the College of Public Health at George Mason University. Previously, she served as chair of the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health at George Washington University between 2011 and 2022. Perry was chair of the Board of Scientific Counselors for the National Center for Environmental Health/Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (NCEH/ATSDR) of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention between 2015 and 2019.