One of the greatest challenges facing those concerned with health and
environmental risks is how to carry on a useful public dialogue on these
subjects. In a democracy, it is the public that ultimately makes the key
decisions on how these risks will be controlled. The stakes are too high
for us not to do our very best. The importance of this subject is what
led the Task Force on Environmental Cancer and Heart and Lung Disease to
establish an Interagency Group on Public Education and Communication.
This volume captures the essence of the "Workshop on the Role of
Government in Health Risk Communication and Public Education" held in
January 1987. It also includes some valuable appendixes with practical
guides to risk communication. As such, it is an important building block
in the effort to improve our collective ability to carry on this
critical public dialogue. Lee M. Thomas Administrator, U. S.
Environmental Protection Agency, and Chairman, The Task Force on
Environmental Cancer and Heart and Lung Disease Preface The Task Force
on Environmental Cancer and Heart and Lung Disease is an interagency
group established by the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1977 (P.L. 95-95).
Congress mandated the Task Force to recommend research to determine the
relationship between environmental pollutants and human disease and to
recommend research aimed at reduc- ing the incidence of
environment-related disease. The Task Force's Project Group on Public
Education and Communication focuses on education as a means of reducing
or preventing disease.