Mirosław January Stasik is a Polish medical doctor and research toxicologist.
Education
Stasik graduated from Łódź School of Medicine (now Medical University of Łódź) and later studied toxicology at the University of Surrey, United Kingdom. In the 1960s he completed his training in internal medicine, and became director of the newly created clinical department of acute poisoning at the Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine in Łódz.
Career
He obtained his Doctor Medical at the Heidelberg University, Germany"s oldest university. There he also pioneered in the field of poison control centers in Poland. During this period he published one of the first clinical works devoted to acute toxicity of tetraethyllead in humans.
This substance was commonly used as an antiknock agent in gasoline until 2005.
Since 1970 he has been living in Germany, with two breaks for training at the Institute of Toxicology of the University of Würzburg and for university study in the United Kingdom. In Frankfurt he directed a centre of toxicology and epidemiology within the department of occupational medicine of a chemical concern Hoechst AG. His research was focused on defining the carcinogenic potential of some aromatic amines, e.g. 3,3"-dichlorobenzidine and derivatives of aniline, as well as ethylene oxide and formaldehyde.
In the 1980s Stasik represented Hoechst at scientific conferences of the Chemical Industry Institute of Toxicology (United States of America), as well as symposiums of the Center for Environmental Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh. These were organized in co-operation with the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
Membership
He was also a member of the Ecology and Toxicology Centre and the European Chemical Industry Council (Conseil Europeen des Federations de l'Industrie Chimique) in Brussels.