Smoke Signals gathers 71 of Professor Simon Chapman’s authoritative, acerbic and often heretical essays from across his 40-year career. They cover major developments and debates in tobacco control, public health ethics, cancer screening, gun control, and panics about low risk agents such as wi-fi, mobile phone towers and wind turbines. This collection is an essential guide to many key debates in contemporary public health. It will be invaluable to public health students and practitioners, and provides compelling, entertaining reading for anyone interested in health policy.
Simon Chapman is professor emeritus of public health at the University of Sydney. In 2013 he was made an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) for his contributions to public health.
Introduction 
 1. Never say die? 
 2. The paradox of prevention 
 3. The commodification of prevention 
 4. A testing time for prostate 
 5. Prostate screening not worth it 
 6. Why do doctors keep silent about their own prostate cancer decisions? 
 7. How famous faces muddle the message on cancer 
 8. Patient consent in spectator surgery not the only consideration 
 9. Does celebrity involvement in public health campaigns deliver long-term benefit? Yes. 10. A nation of flashers should show some modesty 
 11. A long, winding road to end the carnage 
 12. Drink and drive? Not the publican’s problem 
 13. The AIDS myth that will not die 
 14. A shattering of glass in Tasmania 
 15. Gun lobby on shaky ground 
 16. Now, about those guns . . . 
 17. 150 ways (and counting) that the nanny state is good for us 
 18. Tardis travelling into David Leyonhjelm’s post-nanny state dystopia 
 19. Torture by omission 
 20. It’s the government’s call over phone tower debate 
 21. No, we’re not all being pickled in deadly radiation from smartphones and wi-fi 
 22. Wind turbine sickness prevented by the money drug 
 23. Wind turbine syndrome: a classic “communicated” disease 
 24. Questions a prominent windfarm critic needs to answer 
 25. Chilean earthquakes in Australia and other wacky myths from windfarm opponents 
 26. Let’s appoint a judge to investigate bizarre windfarm health claims 
 27. Tragedy puts values at threat 
 28. Charities to be seen but no longer heard? 
 29. Reflections on a 38-year career in public health advocacy: ten pieces of advice to early-career researchers and advocates 
 30. Unravelling gossamer with boxing gloves: problems in explaining the decline in smoking 
 31. The banality of tobacco deaths 
 32. Smokers spend, then pay with their lives 
 33. Death of a Fat Lady 
 34. Stop-smoking clinics: a case for their abandonment 
 35. The inverse impact law of smoking cessation 
 36. Quitting unassisted: the 50-year neglect of a major health phenomenon 
 37. Is it time to stop subsidising nicotine replacement therapies? 
 38. The ethics of the cash register: taking tobacco industry research dollars 
 39. Smoke screen 
 40. It’s smokers, better still those trying to quit, who should benefit 
 41. Corporate responsibility is fast becoming a smoke-free zone 
 42. The problem with selling a lethal product: you just can’t get the staff 
 43. International tobacco control should repudiate Jekyll and Hyde health philanthropy 
 44. When will the tobacco industry apologise for its galactic harms? 
 45. Pleased as Punch: interview with the tobacco industry 
 46. Smoking bastions set to crumble 
 47. Why even “wowsers” argue about smoke bans 
 48. How Santa and the Tooth Fairy collaborated to allow smoking at casino 
 49. Is a smoking ban in UK parks and outdoor spaces a good idea? 
 50. Are today’s smokers really more “hardened”? 
 51. Light cigarettes – deadly despite the name 
 52. Matter of smoke and hire 
 53. Butt clean-up campaigns: wolves in sheep’s clothing? 
 54. Silver screen lights up with a deadly hidden message 
 55. What should be done about smoking in movies? 
 56. Four arguments against the adult-rating of movies with smoking scenes 
 57. Factoids and legal bollocks in the war against plain packaging 
 58. The slow-burn, devastating impact of tobacco plain packaging 
 59. The case for a smoker’s licence 
 60. E-cigarettes: the best and the worst case scenarios for public health 
 61. Spotless leopards? Decoding hype on e-cigarettes 
 62. Ten myths about smoking that will not die 
 63. Ten more myths about smoking that will not die 
 64. Letters to editors 
 65. Bertrand Russell’s Why I am not a Christian: a book that changed me 
 66. Why do researchers donate their time and money to help private conference organisers make big bucks? 
 67. Why I block trolls on Twitter 
 68. Publishing horror stories: time to euthanase paper-based journals? 
 69. My mother’s death 
 70. Dying with dignity with dementia 
 71. Can academics ever retire? 
 Works cited 
   ‘Chapman is a former academic with the rare ability to turn a phrase until it catches the light and to shape an argument to devastating effect.’
Size: 210 x 148 mm
Pages: 356
Copyright: 2016
ISBN: 9781921364594
Publication: 30 Nov 2016