Bringing Decades of Experience to Work at the CDA
By Joe Gorsuch, Copper Development Association Manager of Health & Environmental Sciences
Joe Gorsuch works with environmental regulations and the collection of ecotox data. For 30 years prior to joining the CDA in March, 2009, he worked with Kodak, conducting environmental effects and fate field and lab studies to register chemicals for the photographic industry. From 2005 to 2009 he was President and Owner of Gorsuch Environmental Managements Services, Inc. [GEMS, Inc.] coordinating environmental studies. He holds an undergraduate degree in Wildlife Biology and a master’s degree in Environmental Sciences, focusing on Aquatic Toxicology, both from Purdue University.
Before I joined the CDA, I led the research program on silver at Kodak. I was with the company for three decades and had amassed quite a body of work. The experience and contacts I gained are invaluable, and I’m sure that was one of the reasons I was offered the position at the CDA. Silver and copper aren’t the same programs, but the science is essentially identical and my background was a great fit.
This past November, I was proud to receive the 2009 International Imaging Industry Association (I3A) Achievement Award (I3A is the leading global association and an accredited Standards Developing Organization for the imaging industry) for my work at Kodak and as an independent consultant in leading the 16-year silver environmental research program. Here is a description of the award:
The I3A Achievement Award annually recognizes, encourages and celebrates outstanding accomplishment by an individual who has provided significant contributions to the advancement or growth of the imaging industry, through participation in I3A in either Standards and Initiatives or Advocacy.
It’s rewarding to know that my long career has led to others recognizing me. I really feel great about it. But I can’t take all the credit because of course I had colleagues helping me along the way. Both at Kodak and the CDA, I’ve had the opportunity to work with world-class researchers and government regulatory people, and to build relationships based on mutual trust. After leaving Kodak, there was kind of a void. Although I was doing some exciting environmental consulting work, I wasn’t able to keep doing all the work I had been doing previously, in particular coordinating a major research program. So I was very excited to get this opportunity with the CDA to bring my experience and knowledge to work on copper with some of the researchers I had collaborated with previously. As I said earlier, the science is essentially identical. But we’re now doing copper studies that I never had the occasion to do with silver, including marine studies that are far more advanced, in addition to marine sediment studies that I’m helping to coordinate, which is always exciting. Anytime you get to be a pioneer, it’s exciting.
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By Joe Gorsuch, Copper Development Association Inc. Manager of Health & Environmental Sciences
Copper itself is not a contaminant. In fact, it’s
We’re at a critical point in this project. We started using copper components in hospital rooms in late September 2009. Before that, our time was spent developing and approving protocols, measuring the amount of bacteria in the rooms and fabricating the copper components to be installed there. We hope to demonstrate – and I’m confident we will – a reduction in bioload on the copper vs. the non-copper surfaces. The doctors leading our clinical trials will also look at changes in infection rates in the next phase of the trials. Apparently no one ever demonstrated a reduction in infection rates as a consequence of a reduction in surface bioload. So this would be a first, but they feel the database should be robust enough to do it.
We have a public health registration. We can say we killed within two hours 99.9 % of the five bacteria we tested, including MRSA. To our knowledge it’s the only time they ever granted a public health registration to a solid or coating. So this is landmark. Our competitors don’t have this public health registration, but I’m sure they’re trying to get it.
When I looked at that nurse’s study, I said “I wonder if this is really so and can we repeat it?” We ran the tests in the laboratory setting and indeed it worked against the bacteria, E.coli 0157:H7. Then we tested and found that the copper worked against the hospital infection MRSA, the virulent hospital super bug. I said, “Oh this is really interesting.” However, I didn’t just want to study something. If I can’t use the science, I’m not interested. I wanted to make things happen in the real world. If we could use copper alloys to kill harmful bacteria, it could provide help to fight the bacteria that cause hospital infections.
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We’re trying to get decision-makers, including hospital administrators, infectious disease professionals and architects to recognize that copper can help in the fight against the bacteria that cause infections. People just don’t know about this. What’s really amazing is that ancient societies recognized that copper was antimicrobial before there was a germ theory. But the idea to study this came from a student nurse’s project that was published in a newsletter in 1983. They looked at brass and stainless steel doorknobs in a hospital and found little bacteria on the brass and lots of bacteria on the stainless steel. And then they actually put bacteria on the brass and stainless steel and observed the same thing.
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