Masazumi Harada

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Masazumi Harada (原田 正純, Harada Masazumi, September 14, 1934 – June 11, 2012) was a Japanese doctor and medical researcher. His most famous work covered the effects of Minamata disease, a type of severe mercury poisoning that occurred in the city of Minamata, Kumamoto Prefecture during the 1950s and 1960s. His publications included Minamata disease (水俣病, Minamata-byō) (1972) and Minamata Ga Utsusu Sekai (水俣が映す世界, Minamata Ga Utsusu Sekai) (1989). He died June 11, 2012, of acute myelocytic leukemia at his home in Kumamoto.[1]

Timeline

  • 1934 Born in Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan
  • 1959 Graduates from
    psychoneurology
  • 1972 Minamata-byō is published
  • 1989 Minamata Ga Utsusu Sekai is published
  • 1994 Receives the
    United Nations Environment Program
  • 1999 Retires from Kumamoto University and joins Kumamoto Gakuen University
  • 2004 Minamata-byō is published in English as Minamata Disease
  • 2012 Dies of leukemia

Published works in English

  • Harada, Masazumi. (1972). Minamata Disease. Kumamoto Nichinichi Shinbun Centre & Information Center/Iwanami Shoten Publishers. C3036
  • Harada, Masazumi. (1995-01-01). "Minamata Disease: Methylmercury Poisoning in Japan Caused by Environmental Pollution". Critical Reviews in Toxicology. 25 (1): 1–24.
    PMID
     7734058.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ "Noted Minamata disease authority Masazumi Harada is dead at 77". The Japan Times. 13 June 2012. Retrieved 12 June 2012.