Category: Occupational Disease

  • The Radium Girls Cover-up

    The Radium Girls Cover-up was the belief that the illnesses and deaths of dial painters exposed to radium in the 1910s and 1920s were not only concealed by employers but shielded by a deeper scientific and industrial inner circle determined to preserve radium’s prestige. At the historical core of the case, companies and associated doctors did indeed deny danger, alter or suppress unfavorable findings, and in some instances blame the women’s conditions on syphilis or other causes. The stronger conspiracy version expanded this denial into a secret council of physicists, chemists, and industrial experts who allegedly coordinated the misdirection. Because radium occupied an exalted place in the culture of modern science, medicine, and beauty commerce, the case became one of the clearest examples of a workplace poisoning scandal being interpreted as organized scientific protectionism.