Faculty Profile

Adam Finkel

Adam M. Finkel, ScD, CIH

  • Adjunct Clinical Professor, Environmental Health Sciences

Quantitative risk assessment and cost-benefit analysis of environmental and occupational health and safety regulations, with particular focus on (1) decision-making in the face of uncertainty; and (2) interindividual variability in susceptibility, exposure, and public preferences. Current and previous foci of research include beryllium, halogenated solvents (methylene chloride, perchloroethylene, 1-bromopropane), repetitive strain injuries, commercial applications of synthetic biology, and chronic traumatic encephalopathy in professional football and other occupations. Dr. Finkel was the Director of Health Standards Programs at the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) from 1995-2000, responsible for analyzing, promulgating, and defending (in Congressional and judicial forums) regulations to protect U.S. workers from chemical, infectious, and radiological exposures. From 2000-2003, he was Regional Administrator in charge of all OSHA operations in the Rocky Mountain region (CO, MT, ND, SD, UT, WY).

  • ScD, Harvard School of Public Health, 1987
  • MPP, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, 1984
  • AB, Harvard University, 1979

Dr. Finkel's broad research interests reflect his interdisciplinary training and experience in environmental health, public administration, economics, law, and decision theory-all applied to the quantitative assessment of risks to health, safety, and the environment and to regulatory designs to ameliorate these risks in fair and cost-effective ways. He has pioneered methods to quantify uncertainty and interindividual variability in cost-benefit analysis, and to elicit public preferences for regulatory interventions that affect longevity and economic welfare. He has worked on a wide spectrum of hazards, ranging from workplace carcinogens to global climate change, to the benefits and risks of synthetic biology and its applications, to the problem of neurotrauma in professional football. He conceived the idea for "enforceable partnerships" at the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, wherein industry groups, their customers, and their employees jointly craft codes of practice that government can agree to monitor in lieu of traditional regulation. He is an advocate for the new paradigm of "solution-focused risk assessment," wherein analysts and decision-makers collaborate to propose and evaluate ambitious solutions to multiple risks, rather than to assess risks in a vacuum and declare only aspirational goals to lower them by unspecified means.

Research to Practice
Watch Adam give a TEDx talk about how students can learn to use quantitative decision analysis to make sense of national and personal decisions. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGGZAgjkA0Eandt=611sandab_channel=TEDxTalks
View a "Risk Bites" video where Adam and Andrew Maynard explain his "solution-focused risk assessment" concept applied to synthetic biology. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7XkdbpYWHkandt=39sandab_channel=RiskBites
Watch Adam answer questions from a Congressional skeptic at a hearing on regulating small businesses. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TkH9wRt3I08andt=10sandab_channel=HouseSmallBusinessCommittee-Republicans

Finkel, Adam M. (2018). "A Healthy Public Cannot Abide Unhealthy and Unsafe Workplaces." Invited essay, American Journal of Public Health, 108(3): 312-313, March 2018.
https://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/pdfplus/10.2105/AJPH.2017.304282 

Finkel, Adam M. and Kevin F. Bieniek (2018). "A Quantitative Risk Assessment for Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) in Football: How Public Health Science Evaluates Evidence." Human and Ecological Risk Assessment, April 2018, pp. 1-26.

Finkel, A.M. (2014). "EPA Underestimates, Oversimplifies, Miscommunicates, and Mismanages Cancer Risks by Ignoring Human Susceptibility." Risk Analysis,34(10): 1785-1794, October 2014.

Finkel, A.M. (2016). "Beyond Best-in-Class: Three Secrets to Regulatory Excellence." Chapter 11 (pp. 166-187) in Cary Coglianese, ed., Achieving Regulatory Excellence, Brookings Institution Press, Washington, DC, 322 pp.

Finkel, Adam M. (2018). Comments to the Rulemaking Docket (EPA-HQ-OA-2018-0259) on the "Secret Science" Proposal. August 16, 11 pp.

Finkel, Adam M. (2018). "Demystifying Evidence-Based Policy Analysis by Revealing Hidden Value-Laden Constraints." In Governance of Emerging Technologies: Aligning Policy Analysis with the Public's Values, Gregory E. Kaebnick and Michael K. Gusmano, eds., Hastings Center Report, 48(S1): S21-S49.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/hast.818 

Finkel, A.M. (2017). "It Takes 'Alternative Math' to Claim that Redistribution is Futile." Essay in "The Regulatory Review," March 16;
https://www.theregreview.org/2017/03/16/finkel-alternative-math-claim-redistribution-futile/ 

Finkel, A.M. (1995). "Towards Less Misleading Comparisons of Uncertain Risks: The Example of Aflatoxin and Alar." Environmental Health Perspectives, 103(4), 376-385.

Coglianese, C., A.M. Finkel, and C. Carrigan, eds. (2014). Does Regulation Kill Jobs? University of Pennsylvania Press, 312 pp., ISBN-13: 978-0812245769.
https://www.amazon.com/Does-Regulation-Kill-Jobs-Coglianese/dp/0812223454/ 

Finkel, Adam M. (2018). "Stop Concocting Unscientific Excuses for Ignoring Brain Injuries from Football." Chicago Sun-Times, Oct. 19.
https://chicago.suntimes.com/?post_type=cst_articleandp=1437592 

Email: adfinkel@umich.edu 
Phone: 202-406-0042

Address:
1415 Washington Heights
Ann Arbor, MI 48109