In 1969, Helene K. wrote to the Max Planck Institute for Biophysics offering herself for scientific study. She explained that fallout from American nuclear tests in 1955 and her “great sensitivity to radioactivity” had “devastated [her] whole organism,” condemning her to years of suffering. She assured the institute that she knew of at least sixty other people “as unlucky and as hopeless as I am.” Doctors had been dismissive, Frau K. claimed. “Can you imagine how it felt when a doctor said, ‘You don't really believe that [fallout] from … America comes here?’” Further, she suspected that West German scientists and medical professionals with insight into this “special illness” were not sharing their knowledge.Footnote 1 She hoped to help bring to light this health danger, and also the suffering she believed many in the Federal Republic were forced to live with.
Frau K. was not alone in believing that radiation exposure had affected her health. The idea that nuclear radiation shaped human health—for good or ill—was widely accepted in the early twentieth century.Footnote 2 Before the war, radiation exposure in Germany had been associated with select groups: nuclear scientists, some physicians and their patients, and Erzgebirge miners. By the mid-1950s, a decade after the United States had first dropped the atom bomb, the public began to recognize that nearly everyone faced some exposure through medical treatment, nuclear fallout, workplace exposures, consumer goods, or natural sources. Debates about nuclear radiation as a public health issue ranged from a focus on atomic weapons and nuclear energy to consumer safety. By 1970, historical actors ranging from farmers and housewives to physicians, scientists, and bureaucrats had recast nuclear radiation as a public health hazard. In the process, they envisioned a state responsible for overseeing public health issues, from occupational and environmental health to consumer safety.
Narratives about the Federal Republic—especially in the 1950s and 1960s—have emphasized the triumph of order and rationality over the chaos of the Nazi era. As the story goes, new democratic institutions, economic recovery, and the embrace of international organizations such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom), all promoted technological and political modernization and long-term stability.Footnote 3 Scholars have recognized that technological dangers such as nuclear war, and outbursts of popular anxiety, such as the anti-nuclear protests of 1957–1958, threatened the march of progress. Yet, historians often present such episodes of unrest and apparent irrationality as the exceptions that ultimately proved the rule, when the Federal Republic triumphed over risk and fear with careful management and technical expertise.Footnote 4 The popular disquiet of the 1950s is supposed to have eased in the 1960s, and the 1970s thus appear as a turning point in which “irrational” opposition emerged to disrupt the political and social stabilization of the preceding two decades.Footnote 5
This article suggests the need for two changes to existing narratives. First, it illustrates that anxieties about uncontrollable technology, ineffective institutions, disingenuous political leaders, and volatile citizens persisted from the 1950s to the 1970s, coexisting with optimism and progress and without truly subsiding in the 1960s.Footnote 6 Indeed, the apparent decline in fears about nuclear weapons and technology often reflected the fact that popular anxieties had shifted focus rather than disappeared. When currents of anxiety and optimism intersected, they shaped public opinion and state policy. These interactions sometimes improved state-society communication. Equally important, they laid the ground for later popular opposition.
Second, the article urges historians to take both citizens’ and officials’ fears seriously. Dismissing popular anxiety as irrational or as a passing “spasm” trivializes historical forces that had long-term consequences, and it privileges state narratives over those of ordinary citizens. Footnote 7 Although individual Germans’ specific fears about radiation were often unsubstantiated, concern that the Atomic Age posed health risks was in line with growing scientific consensus and shifts in public debate. Further, West German politicians and officials had no monopoly on rationality. Their fears about popular “hysteria” were understandable after Nazism, but their tendency to dismiss any claims of radiation health risk were out of line with scientific knowledge and their own internal discussions. Popular and official fears were the combined products of limited scientific knowledge, a persistent sense of instability, and mutual distrust between the state and its citizens. Such “irrationality” ultimately produced changes in state policy, new public health initiatives, and better understandings of radiation's medical effects. The big environmental and anti-nuclear movements of the 1970s and 1980s were yet to come, but incremental changes in daily life and local practice had already transformed the cultural and policy landscape.Footnote 8
Scholars have tended to treat broad awareness of radiation as a postwar phenomenon—exploding into public consciousness in 1945 with the atom bomb and, in the 1950s, promising peaceful postwar technology (e.g., nuclear energy, medicine, and agriculture).Footnote 9 The historiography has emphasized periods of mass protest. In the 1980s and 1990s, studies of early Cold War West German atomic culture explored the Kampf dem Atomtod movement of 1958.Footnote 10 More recently, scholars have shown that anti-nuclear weapons sentiment shaped West German politics into the early 1960s.Footnote 11 Nevertheless, the historiography of public perceptions of radiation generally jumps from the anti-weapons activism of the 1950s to the anti-nuclear power and weapons movements in the 1970s, overlooking other kinds of radioactive risk, and leaving the impression that the issue faded from public consciousness in the 1960s.Footnote 12
In fact, in the 1950s and 1960s, West Germans engaged in public discussions of radiation ranging far beyond fears of nuclear war and American and West German government campaigns promoting “peaceful” nuclear energy, to address environmental contamination, radium therapies, and consumer and occupational safety. The common thread was radiation's significance for public health. Participants ranged from political activists to citizens like Helene K. By the late 1960s, West German politicians could no longer ignore the issue.Footnote 13
Many factors shaped West Germans’ views of radiation's health effects. Before World War II, nuclear radiation was touted as a health aid; in the early 1950s, scientists and physicians knew little about its biological effects. Moreover, West German officials downplayed popular fears. The United States and the West German governments celebrated peaceful nuclear technology as offering boundless opportunities.Footnote 14 Responsibility for health policy was scattered across state agencies, making consistent governance difficult. Nevertheless, discussion of nuclear radiation as an environmental hazard and government efforts to eradicate popular radioactive therapies heightened public awareness of radiation's health risks. By defining radioactive risk as a question of public health, these discussions helped pave the way for regional and federal legislation and for later opposition to nuclear power.Footnote 15 Moreover, they illustrate how sea changes in public opinion happen: not necessarily through dramatic events such as Hiroshima or the Kampf dem Atomtod protests, but through information, activism, and the spreading of opinion across the social and political spectrum.Footnote 16
Public Health in a Radioactive Age
In 1956, Der Spiegel wrote that Nagasaki and Hiroshima had illustrated that “illness and death from exposure to radioactivity no longer … threatened only a few scientists.”Footnote 17 Yet, few Germans treated nuclear radiation as an immediate threat to their lives and health in the decade after 1945.Footnote 18 When fears about radiation grew in the mid-1950s, they were as much about health effects from peacetime environmental contamination—atomic testing fallout or waste from nuclear science and energy—as about atomic war.
Throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s, the West German press reported on atomic bomb devastation in Japan, atomic bomb technology, and American and Soviet atomic testing.Footnote 19 Yet, as West Germans confronted the health legacies of World War II—tuberculosis, sexually transmitted diseases, polio, infant mortality, malnutrition—nuclear war remained a secondary concern.Footnote 20 The American Atoms for Peace project and a nascent West German nuclear power program in 1955 made the mid-1950s seem like a time of “Atomic Euphoria” rather than one of fear.Footnote 21
Still, worries about nuclear radiation were rising in the 1950s, as West Germans realized that radioactive contamination from atomic weapons and technology threatened their health.Footnote 22 Postwar politics and bureaucratic structures meant that those concerns often met with silence, deflection, or even ridicule from the state. During the 1950s, West Germany rejected both Nazi and Communist ideas about “national health” (Volksgesundheit). The government stressed citizens’ personal responsibility for health, assigned healthcare to private physicians, and limited regulatory control of physicians. The conservative government of Konrad Adenauer resisted a return to Weimar-era public health practices associated with the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and social welfare initiatives that it thought smacked of “socialism.”Footnote 23 The West German medical establishment focused on acute, not preventive, medicine until the late 1960s, and it was reluctant to intervene on matters of personal choice, such as smoking.Footnote 24
West German citizens embraced state withdrawal from health initiatives such as mass health screenings and immunizations, and came to consider health an individual right integral to postwar democracy. But they did not, as scholars seem to assume, abandon public health as a collective commitment.Footnote 25 Citizens demanded that the government ensure safe environments, workplaces, food and water supplies, and consumer goods, as well as that it combat contagious disease. They questioned the Federal Republic's ability to provide security, but believed that government intervention should mitigate large-scale risks—such as radioactive fallout—that individuals could not control.Footnote 26 By the early 1960s, the state accepted this role, to some degree. As Minister for Atomic Energy Dr. Siegfried Balke explained in 1962, the government saw protection from radioactive fallout as fundamentally different from interference in doctors’ clinical use of radiation.Footnote 27
Nuclear radiation had been celebrated as revolutionary for both allopathic medicine and alternative therapies since the early twentieth century. In the 1930s, this positive reputation faltered but did not disappear, even as scientists, miners, and others with chronic exposure developed cancers and other illnesses.Footnote 28 New atomic technology broadened concerns after World War II. Early stories about the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 and about American atomic tests in the Bikini Atoll in 1946 and 1954 proved that radioactive fallout could cover vast distances and be deadly to people who encountered high-level radiation.Footnote 29 By the mid-1950s, West Germans opened their newspapers daily to read that fallout from American and Soviet tests was polluting air, drinking water, and foods in Bavarian farmyards, as well as in the Bikini Atoll.Footnote 30 American and Soviet nuclear testing in 1956–1958 and 1961–1962 intensified these reports and the fears they provoked.
Worries about radiation contamination emerged alongside warnings that postwar industrial pollution threatened public health, drinking water, and other critical resources.Footnote 31 Postwar pollution concerns shifted away from earlier nature conservation to more environmental focus on industrial effluents and chemical pollution. Radiation contamination—invisible, pervasive, potentially deadly—was a potent example of the dangers of postwar technology.Footnote 32 Critics pointed to the dangers of pollution to human health, rather than to an ecology in which humans were only one factor.Footnote 33 The West German government began monitoring environmental radiation levels from fallout in 1955 to assess potential risks posed by nuclear war and to demonstrate its attention to public health safety. Its reports showed a sharp increase in environmental radiation after US and Soviet nuclear tests in the mid-1950s, and they expanded testing through the end of the decade.Footnote 34
Data alone were not enough to evaluate radiation risk or calm public fears. Assessments of radioactive fallout's implications varied widely. In the 1950s, reports of heightened atmospheric radiation after atomic tests often contained official reassurances.Footnote 35 In 1953, the Hamburger Abendblatt reported that the UN Atomic Energy Commission (UNAEC) had dismissed concerns, claiming that atmospheric radiation levels were hardly more than those of the luminous watches that contained radium paint but were still considered harmless.Footnote 36 Yet, from the mid-1950s on, scientists, physicians, and journalists warned the public repeatedly that rising radiation levels posed immediate danger.Footnote 37 One radiation researcher responded to the UNAEC's argument in this way: “Sure, radiation from luminous watches is minimal, but I find it unsettling when the whole street is paved with such watches.”Footnote 38 In 1955, University of Munich physicist Dr. Jakob Kranz told Bavarian SPD officials, “radioactive dust released into the atmosphere by atomic explosions is reaching levels in Germany that can no longer be described as safe.”Footnote 39 “Humanity is threatened,” wrote journalist and Christian Social Union (CSU) member August Ramminger in 1955: Strontium 90 from Soviet atomic tests was contaminating German soil and entering the food chain and human bodies, he explained. “No one knows what dose is dangerous … We know much more about atomic technology than about the dangers radioactive air poses for humans … By the time we have enough experience, it will be too late for many.”Footnote 40 These warnings indicated that fallout posed new risks in addition to those of familiar exposures from watches or medical treatment, and more immediate than a hypothetical war. Fallout was ubiquitous, cumulative, and hard to measure. That no one knew how to assess the danger was alarming. There was no accepted definition of a toxic dose and no standard way to measure pollutants’ atmospheric travel. Some press reports suggested that official reassurances were disingenuous. In 1955, newspapers claimed that milk was contaminated, and that West Germany secretly tested fish for radiation before they were sold, suggesting that the government knew the dangers were greater than officials would admit.Footnote 41
The West German public responded to reports of fallout contamination with alarm. In 1956, public interest in US and Soviet atomic tests prompted the Hamburger Abendblatt to monitor the air for radiation and to publish daily readings alongside the weather report.Footnote 42 Stories of suspected radiation contamination or illness flooded newspapers and government offices. In one poll, 59 to 68 percent of respondents attributed the summer's cold, wet weather to radiation contamination.Footnote 43 The Austrian and German press reported that patients in Salzburg had complained of headaches and fainting spells at the same time that meteorologists had detected atmospheric radioactivity from fallout—cases the press declared “atomic illnesses.”Footnote 44 The Münchner Merkur asserted: “Every … new atomic test unsettles the public, and today, whenever someone has a headache, the sniffles, or even the flu, they blame radiation.”Footnote 45 An alarmed employee of the Atomic Ministry similarly reported that rain had turned her wash blue, prompting two ministry officials and a physicist to examine her laundry with Geiger counters.Footnote 46 The Passauer Neue Presse suggested that, if atomic testing continued, citizens might need radiation self-protection: “Perhaps a Geiger counter will stand on every dining table next to the salt and pepper so that the modern person can check his food for atomic traces … Perhaps we will use lead umbrellas.”Footnote 47 Speculation aside, some citizens acted on perceived radiation threats. As early as 1954, two brothers in Bad Ems developed a “biometer” the size of a wristwatch to allow citizens to detect radiation.Footnote 48 And, in 1957, Black Forest farmers who noticed that their cows refused to eat their hay concluded that radioactive rain had contaminated the fodder. The farmers stopped drinking milk from their own cows.Footnote 49
Reports of fallout in West Germany expanded the focus of popular radiation fears well beyond the threat of atomic tests. As journalist Leo Nitschmann wrote in Die Zeit in 1956: “The atomic age has begun. We must use all scientific means to defuse its dangers.”Footnote 50 In 1958, he quoted a German physicist who went even further, suggesting, “We should no longer speak of an ‘Atomic Age’ but rather of a ‘Radioactive Age’ … Our environment is rapidly becoming radioactive… and we haven't even begun to use atomic energy.” Footnote 51 Scholars have long suggested that, in the late 1950s and the 1960s, West Germans considered atomic weapons and nuclear fallout threatening, but treated atomic energy and technology as benign and beneficial. This bifurcated view was common.Footnote 52 Yet, as the article in Die Zeit demonstrated, media and popular opinion quickly connected environmental health dangers from fallout to other radiation risks, including the planned development of nuclear energy and technology.Footnote 53 A 1955 survey showed that two-thirds of adults associated atomic energy with bombs.Footnote 54 Anti-nuclear activists such as Bodo Manstein warned that waste from nuclear energy production could be as dangerous as atomic weapons.Footnote 55 As early as 1954, Joseph Baumgartner of the conservative Bayernpartei asked the Bavarian government how they would protect groundwater from radioactive wastewater from planned nuclear reactors.Footnote 56 In 1955, Munich's beer brewers sought reassurances that atomic energy would not contaminate their water and hops.Footnote 57 And, in 1956, at the height of the “atomic psychosis” about radioactive fallout, the Munich City Council held a meeting to discuss radiation's health risks in response to popular alarm about plans to make the region a center for atomic research and energy.Footnote 58 Even natural environmental radiation—once touted as curative by spas—sometimes met with suspicion. In 1959, for example, a popular healer from Upper Franconia was jailed for selling farmers creations of steel wire and stones that, he claimed, would protect them from “malignant earth radiation.”Footnote 59
West German officials distrusted popular sentiment and often dismissed such fears as irrational and ill-informed.Footnote 60 As the Bavarian Ministry of the Interior's Center for Radiation Monitoring wrote in 1957, “arguments about the current danger are made with more fervor than expertise.”Footnote 61 In 1956, a Bavarian Undersecretary of Health pooh-poohed reports of migraine headaches as “atomic psychosis” and “speculation,” complaining, “Bavarians are calling everything … an atomic headache.”Footnote 62 The Passauer Neue Presse also suggested that reports of atomic headaches in Salzburg had sparked “atomic psychosis” in Munich, where “everyone now imagines he is suffering from a headache and dizziness … griping over their beers, ‘It's because of the damned atomic nonsense!’”Footnote 63 During the 1950s, some politicians and bureaucrats asserted that media and public discussion of radiation had whipped up “atomic fear” and “neurosis,” and they urged that official efforts to address radiation health risks be kept quiet to avoid public unrest.Footnote 64 Government attempts to contain “atomic psychosis” reflected early Cold War military strategies to minimize popular panic in the event of a nuclear war.Footnote 65 Critics even suggested that the Soviets were promoting “atomic psychosis” to undermine the Federal Republic and the West—warnings that continued into the early 1960s.Footnote 66
The state's failure to communicate radiation's risks throughout much of the 1950s reflected a fragmented regulatory landscape, as well as officials’ fears of public panic. The early Federal Republic had limited legal means to monitor or control radiation exposure and its health effects. It had inherited a few Weimar- and Nazi-era laws about occupational exposure in mining and medicine. But there was no general regulation of occupational exposure, environmental chemical pollution legislation did not yet exist, and pharmaceutical laws did not cover radioactive materials. Most health policy officially fell to the states (Länder), not federal authorities.Footnote 67 Yet, state governments had neither the expertise nor legal basis to regulate radiation exposure.Footnote 68 Further, public health administration was split among the Atomic Ministry, Labor Ministry, Interior Ministry, and other agencies at both federal and state levels, hampering the development and implementation of coherent policy.Footnote 69
By the late 1950s, the regulatory landscape had changed dramatically, at least on paper. In 1956, the federal government announced new international norms, and plans to develop nuclear power and medicine made radiation health-protection legislation necessary.Footnote 70 Participation in the Euratom Treaty, the Organization for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC), and the International Labor Organization (ILO) committed West Germany to international radiation protection standards and it forced the government to engage more openly with radiation health risks.Footnote 71 Domestic voices such as the German Green Cross health advocacy group and the German Congress of Physicians also declared that fallout and nuclear power had made radiation protection an urgent public health issue.Footnote 72 In 1958, the SPD parliamentary caucus asked the federal and state governments to address radiation contamination, train radiation physicians and biologists, and fund research on radiation's biological effects.Footnote 73 Finally, a 1959 constitutional amendment made the federal government responsible for protecting citizens from ionizing radiation.Footnote 74
The first federal radiation protection law—passed in June 1960—set standards for handling radioactive substances, required permits for possession and trade in many radioactive materials, established occupational dose limits, and created guidelines for environmental protection, warning labels for radioactive materials, and standards for radioactive waste disposal.Footnote 75 The federal Ministries of the Interior, Agriculture and Forestry, Labor and Social Welfare, Transportation, and Atomic Energy and Water Resources expanded monitoring of occupational exposure and radiation in air, soil, and water.Footnote 76 They also enlisted the help of scientific institutes already monitoring radiation.Footnote 77 The German states were to track radiation in waterways, drinking water, and fresh foods, including produce, milk products, and fish.Footnote 78 In November 1961, West Germany finally created a single federal Health Ministry, bringing many health issues under one roof.Footnote 79 Still, policies related to radiation and public health remained divided among multiple ministries and agencies.
West German politicians hoped that new regulations, and a slow-down in international nuclear testing, would ease “atomic psychosis.” But, in the fall of 1961, further Soviet nuclear tests prompted citizens’ fears anew. Headlines in the press screamed: “Death rains from the clouds” and “Atomic plumes over Germany.”Footnote 80 That November, the SPD asked the government to explain (and defend) its fallout protection measures. In a Bundestag debate in January 1962, Dr. Elinor Hubert of the SPD called increased radiation “one of the most serious environmental problems threatening human health.” She suggested that the government's response—releasing environmental data few citizens could interpret—was inadequate.Footnote 81 The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) government insisted that radiation spikes would probably stay within a safe range, but politicians across the political spectrum nevertheless agreed that the Soviet tests posed a public health risk. This consensus translated into policy addressing food and water safety, among other measures.
The SPD's inquiry emphasized environmental pathways through which radiation could harm human bodies. The 1962 parliamentary debate shifted attention from air pollution alone to precipitation and soil pollution as vectors for radiation contamination of food and water. Seen this way, nuclear fallout threatened citizens’ basic needs: clean drinking water, bread, and milk for children. This echoed a broader consensus that environmental degradation undermined West German well-being, and ideas arising from conservationist and government initiatives since the 1950s crystalized in the Green Charter of Mainau in 1961. This conservationist document held that good health and a clean environment were human rights, and it helped set the stage for the West German environmental movement in the 1970s.Footnote 82
The Ministry of Atomic Energy and Water Resources nevertheless insisted that contamination levels were too low to cause health problems. But Social Democrats and other critics argued that, because radiation exposure was cumulative, atomic testing ongoing, and health effects slow to emerge, downplaying the risk was dangerous.Footnote 83 Radiation exposure could not only increase contemporary rates of cancer and other illnesses, but also cause genetic problems in future generations.Footnote 84
Concerns about radiation contamination of drinking water were part of a larger postwar environmental health debate in the Federal Republic. In the 1950s, environmentalists and the press argued that West Germany faced an unprecedented potable water crisis caused by modernization, insufficient infrastructure, industrial pollution, and radiation contamination.Footnote 85 They suggested that West Germany's focus on industrial and technological growth was undermining basic public needs.Footnote 86 In response, the federal government began extending centralized water systems to rural areas in 1956, part of a “Green Plan” to improve West Germany's agricultural sector.Footnote 87 Fears that Soviet nuclear tests could contaminate drinking water forced the Adenauer administration to pursue the policy more aggressively. Testing showed that radioactive fallout flushed out of waterways without contaminating groundwater. But radioactive rain concentrated via evaporation in cisterns, which provided drinking water for many rural communities—especially in Schleswig-Holstein, Lower Saxony, and Bavaria.Footnote 88 The Green Plan shifted two hundred thousand people off rainwater cisterns by 1961.Footnote 89 An estimated forty-five thousand cisterns remained, providing drinking water for over three hundred thousand people.Footnote 90 The government planned to connect these people to central water supplies within two years, worked with industry to develop filters for cisterns, and prepared to truck water to rural areas if radiation levels in the cisterns rose.Footnote 91
The SPD inquiry stressed minimizing radiation in the food chain. West Germans first realized in 1954 that nuclear fallout could contaminate food, based on reports about US atomic testing in the Pacific.Footnote 92 By the late 1950s, radiation fallout was contaminating West German soil and water and then being absorbed by plants, making its way into grain and fresh produce. When livestock ate contaminated grass or fodder, radioactive materials, Iodine 131, and Strontium 90 turned up in their milk and meat. The government assured parliament that it was monitoring radiation in key foodstuffs and that it had begun stockpiling dried and condensed milk in case fresh supplies showed dangerous radiation levels.Footnote 93 The Agriculture Ministry said it had grain reserves that would last a few months; besides, contaminated grain could be diluted with clean supplies, or processed to remove the worst contaminants.Footnote 94
Steps to protect the public from potential fallout reflected policies initiated in the late 1950s, but many were responses to the SPD inquiry, the radiation protection legislation of 1960, and public discussion of fallout risk.Footnote 95 New measures and parliamentary debate reflected shifting attitudes toward “atomic psychosis” and environmental radiation as a public health risk. Although many politicians, especially on the political right, still thought popular fears overblown, most agreed that fallout might be dangerous. By the early 1960s, many politicians, officials, and citizen groups argued that providing more information about radiation monitoring and risk would calm public fears.Footnote 96 As Minister of Health Elisabeth Schwarzhaupt of the CDU told the Bundestag in 1962, “Dangers appear larger in fog … accurate information can be calming.”Footnote 97
Disagreement persisted about what was “accurate.” The SPD asserted that fallout could cause long-term pollution or genetic damage; the conservative majority considered Soviet tests a real but short-term issue.Footnote 98 Atomic Energy Minister Dr. Siegfried Balke argued that such passing risk did not warrant long-term barriers to nuclear power or medicine. Overwrought warnings could do more harm than good: “Has radioactivity become so dangerous that state governments must interfere in citizens’ daily lives?”Footnote 99
Government efforts to limit public health damage from fallout did not mean abandoning the idea that citizens should protect their own health. The Adenauer administration suggested that, in periods of heightened radiation, farmers should keep dairy cows off pasture, and that everyone should wash fresh produce and use frozen vegetables and dried milk.Footnote 100 The message of citizen self-reliance probably bolstered sales of the so-called Volksgeigerzähler, devices consumers could use to test for radiation. But it also met with popular and political resistance. Authorities claimed that fallout was not a major concern, yet conceded that it might confine people to their homes for days.Footnote 101 The SPD argued that the administration still downplayed the risk and failed to give the public information it needed.Footnote 102 In parliamentary debates in January 1962, SPD Bundestag health spokesperson (and physician) Elinor Hubert insisted, “The population needs to know … that the federal government is taking measures to protect it.”Footnote 103
In 1963, the West German government hailed a US, British, and Soviet treaty banning all but underground nuclear testing as an end to radioactive fallout. Die Zeit asserted that ending atomic testing was the only way to halt the rising environmental radiation threatening human health.Footnote 104 Popular radiation fears receded as environmental contamination and media coverage fell, but they did not vanish. During the 1961–1962 fallout scare, the government argued that fallout was a unique risk, since it originated outside the Federal Republic's territory and control, and that German government oversight guaranteed safe atomic energy and other domestic uses of radiation.Footnote 105 The public had often rejected such distinctions in the late 1950s, when fallout danger was high. But, by the late 1960s, many citizens accepted the idea that, with oversight, nuclear energy was safe.Footnote 106 Yet, skeptics remained. Stories about food contaminated by environmental radiation surfaced repeatedly.Footnote 107 In the mid-1960s, communities challenged projected nuclear plants and radioactive waste collection sites, citing environmental public health to demand that projects be cancelled or relocated.Footnote 108 In 1967, a poster protesting a proposed nuclear power plant in Würgassen proclaimed: “Atoms from Würgassen Create Infirmity, Crippling, and Death.”Footnote 109 Media coverage of protests used similar terms. For example, the Neue Westfälische Zeitung quoted physicist and SPD parliamentarian Karl Bechert: “Life near an atomic power plant is as dangerous as living by a powder factory. Invisible radioactive clouds from an accident can endanger the neighbors’ lives.”Footnote 110 By the late 1960s, many West Germans were convinced that environmental radiation already threatened their health. Moreover, the realization that radioactive health aids were endangering personal and public health only bolstered the warnings discussed earlier, as well as the complaints connecting illnesses, real or imagined, to radiation exposure.
Radium Pillows and Radium Water: Consumer Goods as a Public Health Danger
In December 1965, Prof. W. Seelentag of the West Berlin Public Health Office wrote to the Federal Health Ministry that he had “heard of two cases of possible radiation damage from so-called ‘radium compresses’ … The public needs to be told that they should not … use these compresses, and … they should report them to the proper authorities.”Footnote 111 By March 1966, Seelentag reported that he now knew of six such cases. In the early 1960s, regional health officials and dermatologists began identifying patients with carcinomas from long-term use of radioactive compresses, radioactive pillows, or other over-the-counter radioactive therapies.Footnote 112 In 1966, Dr. Willi Born of the University of Freiburg Dermatology Clinic wrote in the Deutsches Ärzteblatt, “Recent observations reveal a wave of unintentionally self-inflicted carcinomas with horrifying clarity.” Most over-the-counter radioactive therapies had been illegal since the First Radiation Protection Law of 1960.Footnote 113 But, Born continued, although such therapies could produce radioactive exposures up to a thousand times higher than the legal limits set in 1960, they remained at large: “What has happened to the countless [radioactive] preparations? As unbelievable as it sounds: Nothing! The radium has remained uncontrolled in the hands and homes of consumers, perhaps still in active use, perhaps passed along, set aside, forgotten, or thrown away—dangerous not only for the owner, but also for many others. Forgotten also by officials obliged to carry out the radiation protection law?”Footnote 114 Dr. Born demanded that the government educate the public and rid the country of radium pillows, compresses, and similar products. Other physicians, organizations such as the pharmaceutical commission of the German Congress of Physicians, and state health authorities joined Born, calling attention to an urgent public health threat.Footnote 115 Between 1965 and 1968, state public health officials launched media campaigns to alert the public to the dangers of radioactive health aids, to halt their use, and to collect as many as possible.
The campaign to eradicate popular radiation therapies focused on changing public perceptions. Over-the-counter “radium” therapies—from radium water, butter, and beer, to pills, tinctures, insoles, cosmetics, pillows, and compresses—had emerged across Europe and North America in the 1910s and 1920s, building on the popularity of radium spas, which claimed that naturally radioactive water cured a multitude of ills.Footnote 116 Doctors also embraced radioactive products in their therapeutic arsenals. Although the medical literature and the press questioned the safety of these therapies in the 1930s, and their use seemed to fall off thereafter, they remained widely accepted, advertised, and unregulated through the 1950s.Footnote 117
It seems impossible that people using these therapies for decades suddenly developed cancers only in the 1960s. Dr. Born noted that physicians had treated a case that appeared in the medical literature in 1954 as anomalous.Footnote 118 Most doctors, like lay people, did not expect radioactive therapies to be dangerous, and because problems developed long after initial exposures, they were slow to connect the dots. These therapies had mainstream status, as illustrated by cases that came to health officials’ attention in the 1960s. One physician wrote in 1965 to Prof. Seelentag of the Federal Public Health Office in Berlin, explaining that his parents had given him a radium compress in 1951 to treat his asthma, and that he had worn it for five years. The package insert asserted that it had “no damaging side effects.” But, in 1961, he developed dermal discoloration, hyperkeratosis, and ulcerations. After consulting with dermatologists, having basal cell carcinomas removed, and discovering people with similar problems, he turned to public health authorities for advice.Footnote 119 Another patient bought a radium pillow in 1953 and used it for six years—reassured by the company's claims that chronic use was safe. After developing metastatic carcinomas, he sued the manufacturer. The court showed little sympathy. Radiation health experts linked the cancers to the pillow, but the court relied on information from the Munich Balneological Institute, which disputed the idea that radium pillows were dangerous. Even if the pillow had caused the cancers, said the court, the manufacturer could not have known the risk in 1953. Dr. Born considered “such ignorance” “pathetic.”Footnote 120 He told federal health authorities that decades of medical experience had demonstrated that these products could be dangerous, and that district attorneys should defend consumers against these companies’ misleading information.Footnote 121 Yet, people still believed the products were safe and effective.
The 1960 radiation protection law outlawed the manufacture and sale of most radioactive products, and it required permits for companies producing radioactive prescription treatments and for physicians prescribing them.Footnote 122 In 1962, further legislation limited the production and sale of pharmaceuticals containing radioactive materials or treated with radiation.Footnote 123 Some state governments had already warned the public about the health risks of popular radiation therapies in 1958–1959. More did so in the early 1960s, in response to the new laws. But, as warnings were often buried in the back of newspapers, public perceptions changed slowly.Footnote 124 After the new law, public health authorities received only a slow trickle of radiation products.Footnote 125
Health authorities’ efforts to eradicate popular radioactive therapies challenged the Federal Republic's hands-off approach to many aspects of public health. Anti-radiation advocates pushed federal and state governments to embrace preventive medicine, limit medical and pharmaceutical practice to qualified practitioners, hold businesses responsible for creating health risks, and educate citizens about health threats. Failing to provide victims with government support would be a “failure of the state's duty to protect its citizens and their health,” said Dr. Born.Footnote 126
In 1967, the federal government tackled the problem in earnest. The Health Ministry asked states to warn the public about radioactive therapies and to collect radium compresses, emanators, salves, pillows, slippers, shoe inserts, pain pills, and drinking cups across the country. They issued official statements and pamphlets, and they asked the media to spread the word.Footnote 127 A rash of sensational television specials, radio broadcasts, and news stories calculated to frighten ordinary citizens followed. As one magazine declared, “anyone who took a Geiger counter to a farm in lower Bavaria would be in for a surprise. The device ticks … There is a radium pillow or a radium cup right in the bedroom.”Footnote 128 Another warned: “radiation death lurks in drawers … in cupboards, and on night tables.” It is easy to “drink innocently” from the cup “that grandma bought thirty years ago,” little suspecting that one was “sowing the seeds for cancer.” West Germans opened their newspapers to read: “Radium Warning! Deadly danger,” “Radiation death lurks in households!” “Deadly rays in Berlin homes,” “Radium rich ‘Heilmittel’ endangers health!” “Patient suffocates in atomic pillow,” “Death crept into households by mail order,” and “Radium ‘therapies’ make you sick, not healthy.”Footnote 129 News reports and public service messages urged people to surrender these therapies to authorities and to see a doctor if they had used them.Footnote 130 They drew an explicit link between cancer and radioactive consumer goods that never before had been publicly associated with cancer.Footnote 131
Media reports of dire health effects from radioactive therapies caught the public's attention. People began to surrender such goods to public health officials and to seek medical exams for radiation damage.Footnote 132 Not all of them understood which products were dangerous. Some radioactive pillows and drinking cups were poorly marked or had lost their labels. Citizens conflated electric blankets, infrared lamps, vibrating pillows, and other nonradioactive gadgets with truly radioactive products.Footnote 133 State offices were unprepared to handle and store hazardous waste, so public health officials had to manage the objects they collected.Footnote 134 The public, it seemed, had realized that popular radioactive therapies were dangerous. But the government's ability to protect public health in the radioactive age remained a work in progress.
Narratives of Radiation Danger Converge
The West German government, scientists, and medical professionals had long treated atomic fallout, popular radioactive therapies, medical treatment, X-rays, and occupational exposures separately, a tendency exacerbated by health and radiation policy fragmented across multiple state agencies. Government campaigns against popular radioactive therapies avoided mentioning non-medical radioactive products to avoid public “confusion.”Footnote 135 They also ignored contemporaneous debates about atomic fallout or nuclear power.
Citizen inquiries in 1968–1969 nevertheless suggest that many people now believed that radiation—from any source—could be a health threat. Helene K.’s letter to the Max Planck Institute was not anomalous.Footnote 136 Others also told authorities that radiation had harmed them. Richard W., for example, asked the Health Ministry for treatment of a ten-year old “radioactive burn” on his hand. He “confirmed” radiation damage by holding a Geiger counter against his hand. Having never worked with radioactive materials, he believed that the problem stemmed from radioactive rain following hydrogen bomb tests in 1954.Footnote 137 Wilhelm S. similarly complained that a 1957 X-ray had damaged his health.Footnote 138 One writer asked whether his luminous watch was dangerous.Footnote 139 Another thought his wife's tour of a particle accelerator had caused their child's Down syndrome.Footnote 140 In 1968, American reports claiming that rings made of gold used in radiation medical treatments had caused carcinomas sparked popular concerns—and questions in the Bundestag—about jewelry safety.Footnote 141
The 1950s and 1960s constituted a distinct period in the Federal Republic's “Radioactive Age.” By the late 1960s, West German citizens believed that nuclear radiation offered threats and opportunities in many areas of life—military, civilian, environmental, occupational, and medical. Despite official efforts to treat sources of radiation separately, citizens concluded that warnings about fallout and popular therapies raised questions about occupational safety and nuclear power. Citizens’ specific claims of radiation danger were sometimes implausible, but their fears should not be dismissed as irrational. Radiation health risk was supported by science, press coverage, international organizations, and state public health initiatives. Citizens demanded broad protections from radiation—ranging from safe food, water, consumer goods, and work conditions to personal health problems.
Popular demands and state responses to public “neuroses” illustrate that anxiety and perceived instability were integral, even productive, elements in the Federal Republic through the 1960s. The absence of mass protest was not proof of steady stabilization, as scholars often assume.Footnote 142 Citizens articulated their unease in shifting and varied ways, from concerns about fallout to questions about luminescent watches. Such diversity has obscured the degree to which those fears—and the anxieties they awakened in state actors—persisted through the 1960s.
Politicians and government officials gradually learned not to ignore popular worries. International agreements spurred domestic radiation protection and lent an air of rationality to radiation fears. But state actors also responded to citizens’ concerns as they discovered that government transparency eased public distrust and won broader acceptance of nuclear power—at least for a time. This apparent convergence of grassroots action and government engagement reflected a degree of democratization and technological and political rationalization—key elements to the Federal Republic's success, according to established narratives. By 1970, the Federal Republic had made radiation safety measures integral to many aspects of its law and administration. Such successes were real, but by no means linear or complete. Incremental changes in policy and in public discussion ultimately raised more questions than they settled. Fear of nuclear war, the expansion of nuclear power, and questions about nuclear waste disposal produced widespread anti-nuclear and environmental activism in the 1970s and 1980s. In the Federal Republic, safety, stability, and freedom from fear remained elusive goals for state and society alike.