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Dr. Jerome J. Wesolowski was one of the founding
members of the International Society of Exposure Analysis and served as a
Councilor on the Board of Directors from 1991 to 1993 and as the Liaison with ISEA
International Territorial Chapters from 1992 until his death. Dr. Wesolowski had a
distinguished career in public health. He made many scientific contributions to the
understanding of human exposures to environmental pollutants and was dedicated to using
that knowledge to improve public health.
Jerry received his Ph.D. in nuclear physics from
Washington University in St. Louis, MO, in 1963. His early years of research
on nuclear reactions and fission physics led him to the use of neutron
activation and x-ray fluorescence for analysis of trace elements in ambient
aerosols and to a career in environmental science. He was one of the original
principal investigators of the lunar materials obtained by the Apollo 11, 12
and 13 mission astronauts. As one of the Co-Principal Investigators in the
California ACHEX Study (Aerosol Characterization
Experiment), he collaborated with a number of other distinguished
scientists in a pioneering study of smog aerosols.
At the time of his death, Jerry had been Chief of the
Air and Industrial Hygiene Laboratory of the California Department of Health Services
for 21 years and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Civil Engineering of the
University of California, Berkeley. While at the Department of Health Services, he
was the founder of the California Childhood Lead Program, the California Human
Monitoring Program and the California Indoor Air Quality Program. He was
internationally recognized for his work on exposures to lead and indoor air quality,
including passive smoking. He was the author or co-author of over 200 scientific
research papers which contributed to the development of a better understanding of the
human exposures to environmental pollutants.
Jerry served on many state and federal scientific
advisory committees over the years, including the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency's Science Advisory Board Committee on Indoor Air Quality and Total
Human Exposure and the Clean Air Science Advisory Committee. While on the
former, he helped to review EPA's report on "Respiratory Health Effects of
Passive Smoking: Lung Cancer and Other Disorders." He was also a member of the
National Research Council's Committee on Advances in Assessing Human Exposures
to Airborne Pollutants which prepared the report "Human Exposure Assessment for
Airborne Pollutants: Advances and Opportunities."
More recently, Jerry was one of the founders and
directors of the U.S. Committee on Poland's Environment (COPE), a non-profit
organization whose purpose was to foster a better understanding of Poland's
environmental problems and their solutions. Among Jerry's many COPE initiatives
were: co-sponsorship of a conference on "Voluntary and Involuntary Smoking in
Central and Eastern Europe," in Warsaw; co-sponsorship of a scientific
symposium in Pultusk, Poland, on "Protecting Workers, the Environment and Health
in a Market Economy: Translating Science into Policy and Action;" a research study
on the "Relationships between Residential Indoor Pollution and Housing
Characteristics in Krakow;" and sponsorship of numerous Polish scientists and
specialists to participate in training programs, exchanges and conferences in the
U.S. and Europe. In recognition of his many contributions to Poland's efforts to
solve its many environmental health problems, Dr. Wesolowski was awarded Honorary
Membership in the Polish Society of Hygiene, established in 1857.
Jerry cared deeply about high quality scientific
research and use of such research to develop sound public polices to protect
human health. His recurrent question at many research reviews, "What's the
hypothesis?" served to refocus many poorly designed research projects. In
his career in public health, Jerry believed that you should "Always do
the right thing. It will gratify some. .and confound the rest!"
Those of us who had the privilege of knowing
him and serving with him on various committees and boards will miss his
good judgment, his ability to get cut to the critical point of many a
discussion, his generosity of spirit, and his wonderful dry sense of humor.
In his honor and memory, the International
Society of Exposure Analysis has established the Jerome J. Wesolowski Award
for sustained and outstanding contributions to the knowledge and practice of
human exposure assessment. The first award was the Joint Conference of ISEA
and ISEE (International Society of Environmental Epidemiology) at Research
Triangle Park, NC, 18-21 September 1994.
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