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In Appreciation Of Mervyn Susser (1921-2014)

By Nigel Paneth

[Ed. Nigel Paneth of Michigan State University studied with Mervyn Susser at Columbia and conducted an interview of him published in the Voices feature of Epidemiology in 2003. We invited Dr Paneth to provide this up close remembrance of Mervyn Susser.]

I am one of many who had the privilege of having been taught and mentored by Mervyn Susser, and I am surely not alone in deeply feeling and mourning his loss, though he lived as long and productive and exciting a life as anyone could wish for. 

Early Career

Mervyn belonged to that great generation of epidemiologists who helped to shape the scope and form of chronic disease epidemiology in the 1950’s.  Born in South Africa and exiled by apartheid, his first academic post - in Manchester - brought him into the orbit of the British wing of those epidemiologic pioneers.  But he differed from Jerry Morris and Richard Doll and many of his epidemiologic contemporaries in his deep immersion in the social sciences, and his emphasis on the philosophical and methodological roots of epidemiology.   His first book, co-authored with the sociologist William Watson, was titled Sociology in Medicine (1962) and covered a far larger territory than just epidemiology.  A necessary narrowing of his focus to epidemiology came with his appointment, in 1966, as Chair of Epidemiology at the School of Public Health at Columbia University, which already had a division of Sociomedical Sciences.  Mervyn once recounted to me how he divided the academic turf with that division’s head, Jack Elinson.  Studies whose outcome was a human behavior belonged in Sociomedical Sciences; studies whose outcome was a health disorder belonged in Epidemiology.    

Two-Themes

At Columbia, Mervyn developed the two themes for which he is best known – his lifelong engagement with the philosophy of epidemiology, and the establishment of the Dutch Famine Cohort Study with Zena Stein, his wife and colleague.  An aside is necessary here.  It is difficult to write an appreciation of Mervyn Susser by himself.  His work and Zena’s were so wonderfully intertwined that I sometimes think I was taught by a single epidemiologist named MervynandZena.   It is generally assumed that one arena that Mervyn took as his own province was the exploration of the conceptual bases of epidemiologic thought and practice.  Yet even here one must note his dedication to Causal Thinking in the Health Sciences (1973) - “This book is for Zena, with her, and of her”.

Health Consequences

Mervyn was an epidemiologist fully engaged with the social and political implications of epidemiology.  This was most strongly manifest in his lifelong struggle against apartheid, which began in the 1940’s alongside Mandela, Sisulu, Tambo and other ANC leaders.  His anti-apartheid activities led to his being forced to resign from his clinical post in Alexandra township and his departure for England.  Their home in Hastings, NY was ever full of political exiles visiting or finding refuge.  Zena would sometimes remind us that Mervyn was just continuing his father’s profession; Solomon Susser had been an innkeeper in the remote Transvaal.      

Dutch Famine Study

Mervyn knew how to separate the political from the scientific. The Dutch Famine study revealed that, contrary to popular wisdom at the time,  a famine so desperately severe that many women delivered weighing less than they had at conception, and where birthweight at the famine peak dropped by 250 grams, produced no deleterious effect on adult IQ (at least in men, where data were available).  I once witnessed a presentation of these data where a progressive physician argued that the data should be censored because they could be used to obstruct prenatal nutrition programs.  But Famine and Human Development: The Dutch Hunger Winter of 1944-1945 (1975) and numerous papers argued firmly for the validity of these negative findings.   Criticism also flew in when Mervyn, Zena and their colleague David Rush published the findings of the Harlem Prenatal Nutrition trial which showed that nutritional supplementation in pregnancy had very modest effects on fetal growth, and adding protein to the diet might actually harm fetal growth. These experiences showed that overturning received knowledge is not always taken kindly in academe, and I learned from Mervyn and Zena that good scientists carefully separate science from advocacy.  

Mentor

Mervyn was an extraordinary mentor.   As a lecturer, he lacked the flair for drama that makes for good student ratings, but in a small group he exuded wisdom.   He could find a scientific context and precedent for any topic under discussion, and he had an uncanny ability to get to the heart of an issue, discarding the irrelevant.   In practical matters, such as the construction of a field team or the development of a research budget, he saved many of his younger colleagues from serious errors.  He looked for the best in people, especially younger scientists whose abilities were not yet fully developed or even apparent.   He was encouraging without being uncritical, as anyone who went through dozens of drafts of a paper with him will remember.  

Giant In The Field

Born in a remote African village, his education interrupted by six years of WW II military service, and with hardly any formal education in epidemiology, he nonetheless became a giant in our field.   And he nourished many epidemiologists, including his son Ezra and his nephew Aryeh Stein, making epidemiology into a family business.  But in the warmth of the MervynandZena world we were all family.   
 

Mervyn & Zena Susser
 


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