Joseph LaDou

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Joseph LaDou (born August 19, 1938; died November 10, 2023),[1][2] 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,[2] and was co-director of the residency program there from 1982-1991.[citation needed] LaDou was founding editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health, serving in that capacity from 1992 to 2005.[3] [4] During the same years, LaDou was director of UCSF's International Center for Occupational Medicine.[5]

Career[edit]

From 1983 to 2002, in addition to his other responsibilities, LaDou was the director to "Advances in Occupational and Environmental Medicine", a continuing medical education course that trained more than 3,000 physicians (500 from developing countries) in occupational medicine.

LaDou's study of the global migration of hazardous industries[citation needed] led to efforts to control occupational and environmental hazards.[citation needed] As one example, his study of asbestos in developing countries (LaDou, 2004) led to a call for an international ban on asbestos mining and use in commercial products.[5] Following retirement, LaDou was Professor Emeritus of Medicine at UCSF.[2]

Works[edit]

Among LaDou's notable publications:

  • LaDou, Joseph, ed. 1986. Special Issue on "The Microelectronics Industry," State of the Art Reviews: Occupational Medicine 1 (1, January–March). Philadelphia: Hanley and Belfus.
  • LaDou, Joseph, and Timothy Rohm. 1998. "The International Electronics Industry," International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health 4 (1): 1-18.
  • LaDou, Joseph. 2003. "International Occupational Health," International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health 206:303-313.
  • LaDou, Joseph. 2004. "The Asbestos Cancer Epidemic", Environmental Health Perspectives 112 (3): 285-90.
  • LaDou, Joseph. 2006. "Occupational Medicine in the United States: A Proposal to Abolish Workers’ Compensation and Reestablish the Public Health Model," International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health 12 (2): 154-168.
  • LaDou, Joseph, and John C. Bailar III. 2007. "Cancer and Reproductive Risks in the Semiconductor Industry," International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health 13 (4): 376-385.
  • LaDou, Joseph, and Sandra Lovegrove. 2008. "Electronics Waste Export," International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health 14 (1) :1-10.
  • LaDou, Joseph. 2010. "Worker's Compensation in the United States: Cost Shifting and Inequities in a Dysfunctional System," New Solutions 20 (3): 291-302.
  • LaDou, Joseph. 2011. "The European Influence on Workers’ Compensation Reform in the United States", Environmental Health 10 (1): 103.
  • LaDou, Joseph. 2012. "Workers’ Compensation Reform," Int J Occup Environ Health 18 (2): 92-5.
  • LaDou, Joseph, Leslie London, and Andrew Watterson. 2018. "Occupational Health: A World of False Promises," Environmental Health 17 (1): 81. doi:10.1186/s12940-018-0422-x.
  • LaDou, Joseph, and Robert J. Harrison, eds. 2021. Current Diagnosis & Treatment: Occupational & Environmental Medicine, 6th ed. McGraw-Hill Medical, New York. ISBN 978-1260143430

Honors[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Aspen Daily News, November 17, 2023. "Obituary: Joseph "Joe" LaDou". Accessed: November 28, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Harrison, Bob, et al. (2023, Nov. 16) "The passing of Joe LaDou, MD, UCSF emeritus professor and leader in occupational and environmental medicine." Chair's Corner, UCSF Department of Medicine. Accessed: November 28, 2023.
  3. ^ International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health website. Accessed: August 9, 2015.
  4. ^ LaDou, Joseph. 2020. "A World of False Promises: International Labour Organization, World Health Organization, and the Plea of Workers Under Neoliberalism," International Journal of Social Determinants of Health and Health Services, 50(3):314-323. doi:10.1177/0020731420917912
  5. ^ a b Miller, Jeff. (1999, January). "Joe LaDou: The Invisible Man," UCSF Magazine.
  6. ^ Collegium Ramazzani. (1998, October 24). Certificato Onorem, Joseph LaDou. Available: https://www.collegiumramazzini.org/download/1998_CERTIFICATO_ONOREM_Ladou.pdf. Accessed 8 November, 2023).