Scientist Sir Richard Doll Dies at 92 -
Doll Was Among the First Researchers to Link Smoking and Lung
Cancer
A 50-year study has provided the most comprehensive picture
yet of the perils of smoking. For half a century eminent
scientist Sir Richard Doll has followed smokers to assess
just what impact their habit is having on their health.
BBC News Online profiles the man who first confirmed the
link between smoking and lung cancer.
Fifty years ago, doctors at the UK's Medical Research
Council published a scientific paper that was truly
ground-breaking. They revealed that smoking can cause lung
cancer. It was the first time the link had been confirmed.
The findings were to change the minds and lives of millions
of people around the world.
In 1954, 80% of British adults smoked. Today, that figure is
26%. Sir Richard Doll was one of the men behind that
pioneering study. He was 41 at the time and had been working
in the MRC's Statistical Research Unit since the end of
World War II.
The study was the culmination of years of work, all aimed at
trying to find out why so many people were dying from lung
cancer.
"Mortality from lung cancer was increasing every year in the
first few decades of the last century," said Sir Richard.
"People didn't pay any attention to these mortality rates
during the war. "But in the years that followed, they
started to become concerned."
Today, few people dispute that smoking causes cancer. In
post-war Britain it was a very different story. Some
scientists had suggested that rising rates of lung cancer
may be due to smoking. But tests on animals appeared to rule
out a link. Many researchers, including Sir Richard, started
to investigate other potential suspects.
"I personally thought it was tarring of the roads. We knew
that there were carcinogens in tar." Sir Richard and his
colleagues interviewed 700 lung cancer patients to try to
identify a possible link. "We asked them every question we
could think of," he said. "It wasn't long before it became
clear that cigarette smoking may be to blame. I gave up
smoking two-thirds of the way through that study."
The findings were published in 1951. However, it wasn't
until the 1954 paper was published that people started to
take notice.
"Nobody believed us," said Sir Richard. "They thought there
may be other explanations."
Historic study - The MRC researchers
continued with their work. This time they enrolled every
doctor in the UK in their study.
In 1951, they asked 40,000 doctors if they smoked. Over the
course of the next three years, they compared those answers
with information about doctors who went on to develop lung
cancer. They found a direct link. The findings prompted the
then UK health minister Iain Macleod to call a news
conference. Chain-smoking throughout, he said: "It must be
regarded as established that there is a relationship between
smoking and cancer of the lung."
The study has provided the foundation for all other research
into the impact of smoking cigarettes on health. It has
arguably helped to save millions of lives.
Sir Richard's work has been recognized throughout the world.
He has received honorary degrees from 13 universities. He
has won countless awards, including the United Nations Award
for Cancer Research in 1962 and the gold medal of the
European Cancer Society in 2000. His achievements have been
recognized by the Queen. He was knighted in 1971 and made a
Companion of Honour in 1996 for services of national
importance.
But among his peers, Sir Richard is known for much more than
just his 1954 paper. Over the course of the past five
decades, he has published hundreds of papers on topics as
varied as oral contraception, peptic ulcers and electrical
power lines. He has shown that all radiation is potentially
harmful, which wasn't always thought to be the case, and
that aspirin can protect against heart disease. He has
uncovered evidence to suggest that drinking alcohol
increases the risk of breast cancer and that electrical
power lines do not cause cancer.
Hitting the headlines - His findings have
sometimes sparked controversy. So too has the man. In 2001,
he riled the anti-smoking lobby after appearing to downplay
the risks from second-hand smoke. In an interview on BBC
Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, he said: "The effects of
other people smoking in my presence is so small it doesn't
worry me."
In February 2004, he hit the headlines after saying he
would be willing to go to prison because of new rules on
medical research. At 91, Sir Richard remained as busy
and as sharp as ever. In March that year, he took part
in the topping-out ceremony for the new Richard Doll
Building at Oxford University. Fittingly, the building
will house some of the country's top cancer researchers.
In June 2004, he published further findings from the
study he started in 1951.
Some 67
years after graduating from medical school, he was only
then for the first time considering retirement. |
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Global Recognition
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1962: UN award for cancer research
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1974: New York Academy of Science Presidential Award
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1981: Bruce Medal, American College of Physicians
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1983: Gold Medal, British Medical Association
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1986: Royal Medal from the Royal Society
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2000: Gold Medal from the European Cancer Society
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2002: Norway's King Olaf V award for outstanding
work on cancer
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