During the Depression, silicosis, an industrial lung disease, emerged as a national social crisis. Experts estimated that hundreds of thousands of workers were at risk of disease, disability, and death by inhaling silica in mines, foundries, and quarries. By the 1950s, however, silicosis was nearly forgotten by the media and health professionals. Asking what makes a health threat a public issue, David Rosner and Gerald Markowitz examine how a culture defines disease and how disease itself is understood at different moments in history. They also consider who should assume responsibility for occupational disease.
3.5 stars: I read this as part of a research project on organized labor responses to occupational health hazards, particularly chronic diseases and conditions, and it's definitely a helpful and appropriately dense book. Every bit of information included supports the authors' arguments, and they balance considerations of science, policy, historical context, and interest groups' motives well. I do strongly agree with another review that "...the voices of patients and rank-and-file workers are almost completely absent," which could have uplifted the more summarized or theoretical parts of the narrative, especially when silicosis's impact on workers' lives was at the ultimate heart of the book.
I am fascinated by early 20th century industrial health and hygiene-- I know, it's hardly the kind of thing you can imagine getting wound up about. That said, it's really an ideal topic in which to explore issues of the social construction of illness, chronic v. acute illness, labor, power, greed, health, and welfare. Here, there are actual conflicts over these issues: violent strikes, angry pamphlets, work stopages! It really is exciting. Rosner and Markowitz's book has some of this excitement. They focuses on silicosis, a somewhat forgotten dust disease that impacted men working in metal mines, rock quarries, and granite finishers from roughly 1900-1950. Three themes animate the book: the difficulty in dealing with chronic diseases that may have links to industry; how different languages (e.g. labor, engineer, business) defined the disease; and the tactics used to achieve or prevent silicosis being defined as an industrial disease.
Rosner and Markowitz are particularly interested in the multiple stakeholders involved in defining silicosis as a disease covered by workers' comp laws. Thus, they begin by describing the biology of silicosis (essentially the inhalation of miniscule particles of silica) and then moving on to how technicians, industrial leaders, and workers each interpreted the same set of evidence. They emphasize that silicosis peaked as a public interest during the Depression. After World War II, it gave way to either a) other dust diseases like black lung and brown lung or 2) was simply relegated to the past. A relic of a time before safety inspection and engineering corrected the problem.
While the content of "Deadly Dust" is excellent, I found that the text lacked much of what makes industrial health so fascinating a topic. For example, the voices of patients and rank-and-file workers are almost completely absent. The prose, while clear, was dry and lacked the energy that I appreciate in authors writing about the labor movement. It's an excellent introduction to silicosis and the early occupational health movement, but casual readers should be warned that it is not a light read.