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FrankRep
04-27-2011, 05:45 AM
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The grimness of the death and destruction in Japan wrought by the earthquake and tsunami is exacerbated by worries about radiation — but should it be?


Fukushima: Just How Dangerous Is Radiation? (http://thenewamerican.com/tech-mainmenu-30/environment/7257-fukushima-just-how-dangerous-is-radiation)


Ed Hiserodt | The New American (http://thenewamerican.com/)
27 April 2011


The situation in Japan is grim. Estimates of the dead or missing — and by now this latter group must be moved into the dead column — is above 25,000 souls. A half-million residents are homeless, with many in danger of starvation since roads and railroads have simply disappeared. Yet the world’s media pays only lip service to the plight of Japanese citizens. It is almost entirely focused on the disabled nuclear reactors and the “leaks” of radiation that have had, and will have, virtually no effect on human health.

In the last few weeks, we have read reports of foreigners scrambling to leave the country, of levels of radioactive iodine in seawater that are seven-and-a-half million times the “legal” limit, and now the news that the recovery of bodies is being hampered because the dead are contaminated by radiation.

Interestingly, many of the expatriates “escaped” to areas where the background radiation was higher, in some cases much higher, than the areas in Japan they were evacuating owing to radioactive releases. An April 1 Bloomberg article (http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-04-01/hong-kong-radiation-exceeds-tokyo-even-after-nuclear-crisis.html) by Stuart Biggs and Yuriy Humber gave the current background radiation measurements in Tokyo compared with other areas. Even after the releases in Japan, the amount of background radiation in Tokyo is still below the world average. The article (http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-04-01/hong-kong-radiation-exceeds-tokyo-even-after-nuclear-crisis.html) quoted Bob Bury of the UK’s Royal College of Radiologists, “The situation in Japan looks set to follow the pattern of Chernobyl, where fear of radiation did far more damage than the radiation itself.”

Regarding the concentration of Iodine 131 in seawater, one might ask on what basis any legal limit is derived. The “normal” concentration of this isotope in seawater is zero, as only relatively tiny amounts are produced in nuclear reactors, and these for all intents and purposes cease to exist after 90 days because of radioactive decay. This seems to be a case of bandying huge numbers for no other purpose than to create fear — something all too common in journalism these days.

If we analyze for a moment the MSNBC.com story “Japan faces another dilemma: Radiation-contaminated bodies (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42441638/ns/world_news-disaster_in_japan/),” we should remember that exposure to radiation does not make one radioactive, e.g., you don’t become radioactive from an X-ray. So any contamination would have had to settle out from the atmosphere onto the bodies. One might ask how the radioactive particles know how to zero in on the corpses and avoid the area that surrounds them.

Even more irony comes from the land of liberals, California — home to Barbara Boxer, Dianne Feinstein, and Governor Jerry Brown — where many residents are fearful of the effects of radioactive particles carried on the winds from Japan. UConn physics professor emeritus Howard Hayden points out in his newsletter, The Energy Advocate, that the joke is on the Californians who are now gobbling down potassium iodine pills to saturate their thyroids in an attempt to block an accumulation of radioactive iodine. The “K” in KI pills is potassium, a small percentage of which is radioactive Potassium 40. In an attempt to avoid barely detectable amounts of Iodine 131, they are ingesting easily measurable amounts of bone-seeking Potassium 40. Actually this radiation won’t bother them either, although the pills are not gentle on the digestive system and give the same symptoms — nausea and cramping — as does real radiation sickness, which has afflicted no one in Japan, let alone thousands of miles away in the United States.

Why the Outcry?

Fear of radiation is a learned behavior. Moreover, it’s not something we learn from personal experience or observation. We have no way to sense it and must be told by others that we are in danger. As noted above, we receive plenty of information from the media on the dangers of radiation, and this is nothing new. Professor Bernard Cohen of the University of Pittsburgh looked at the New York Times Information Bank, which allows access to numerous publications, and found over the period 1974 to 1978 that there were about 120 stories per year on automobile accidents that killed some 200,000 people. But there were 200 stories per year on radiation that killed no one. Do you know anyone who died or was sickened by radiation? Do you know anybody who knows anybody who was such a victim? The odds are a million to one against it.

Another major reason for the fear is a lack of understanding about what levels of radiation are dangerous and where we might encounter them. Let us establish then how to quantify radiation and relate that to the harm it might cause us. First, though, be aware that we are talking about ionizing radiation from nuclear reactions, X-rays, cosmic rays, or emissions from elements that are naturally radioactive or have been made radioactive from exposure to neutrons in a nuclear reactor. We are not referring to microwave, infrared, or ultraviolet radiation.

Our first hurdle is to understand the units of radiation exposure. Unfortunately, there are two systems and each has different units to express intensity. In the United States the terms more commonly used by medical professionals are the rad and the rem. The rad is a measurement of radiation energy absorbed by matter, while the rem (Roentgen equivalent man) considers not only the amount of radiation, but its biological effect on humans and other animals. For gamma radiation and X-rays, the types of primary interest here, the two terms are equivalent. A rem, however, is a large dose of radiation; hence, to avoid lots of zeros to the right of the decimal point, the term we will be using is the millirem (mrem), one-thousandth of a rem.

The International System (S.I.) — abbreviated from French: Systèm International d´unités — uses two other terms for radiation measurement. The gray (Gy) is equal to 100 rads, and the sievert (Sv) is equal to 100 rems. This is mentioned here because much of the information from other countries and in current news stories is cited in mSv — a millisievert equal to 100 times the exposure of a mrem, i.e., 1 mSv = 100 mrem.†

http://thenewamerican.com/images/stories2011/09aApril/2709-cs-radiation-table1.jpg

So we now have a unit of measurement — the mrem — that we can use to compare different levels of radiation. Table 1 shows a few examples. Note that one must be exposed to something in the area of 100,000 mrems of radiation in a short period to suffer symptoms of acute radiation exposure, and even more than that to risk death.

Mutation Scares

Survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs were forced participants in a huge epidemiological study of long-term radiation effects. The 86,572 individuals (including pre-born babies) within 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) radius of the blasts were required to carry a “Health Handbook” that recorded even the slightest details of the victim’s health history. Of particular concern to the Japanese was the expectation of thousands of mutations in future births, but such worries were misplaced. While fruit flies that are exposed to radiation are mutated in odd ways (extra legs, eyes, etc.), humans are either not so susceptible, or the degree of mutation is so small as to be lost in the host of normal mutations common to our species. Zbigniew Jaworowski, a member of the UN Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR), wrote (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2889503/) in Science in July 2001: “In 1958 UNSCEAR had no doubts about major genetic defects in the world population that could be caused by nuclear test fallout, and estimated them as high as 40,000. But now the Committee has learned that even among the children of highly irradiated survivors of atomic bombings no statistically significant genetic damage could be demonstrated (UNSCEAR 2001).”

Delayed Effects

Aside from death and radiation sickness resulting from extremely high doses of radiation, the only other known negative effect of radiation on humans is an increased risk of cancer. While certainly real, this threat seems overblown. Professor John Cameron, of the University of Wisconsin Medical School, points out that there were only about 400 excess cancer deaths in the tens of thousands of exposed individuals in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

If a large-scale, real-life sampling of radiation survivors didn’t validate hypotheses of skyrocketing cancer rates, though many of the affected people suffered acute radiation exposure, why then do we hear terrifying reports about the number of cancer deaths we can expect from the recent partial meltdown in Japan, where no one has been reported to have faced acute exposure? It is because of a statistical hypothesis known as Linear No Threshold theory, or LNT.

Linear No Threshold theory assumes that there is a linear relationship in the amount of danger posed by increasing levels of radiation. Let’s use aspirin to demonstrate LNT at work. Assume that 100 tablets is a 100-percent fatal dose of aspirin. (That is roughly the case for a 200-pound man.) Linear No Threshold theory would predict that 50 tablets would cause a 50-percent mortality rate, 10 tablets would result in 10-percent mortality, and a single tablet would cause one percent of the users to die. We can pretty well agree that this doesn’t happen with aspirin, but we are told that it does for radiation.

High doses of radiation, for example 100,000 mrem, are carcinogenic and generally follow the LNT. But there is a growing consensus among health professionals that no such risk occurs below 10,000 mrem. Anti-nuclear activists and the media haven’t caught on to this, however, as the following example shows.

Let us assume that the risk of cancer increases by 10 percent for anyone exposed to 100,000 mrem of radiation. If we extrapolate this linearly to zero, then at 10,000 mrem we have a one-percent increase in cancer. At 10 mrem, there would be a 0.001 percent increased risk of cancer. Now comes a hypothetical release of radiation that blankets the country of Japan with a dose of 10 mrem, the U.S. average for 10 days from natural sources. With a population of 127,000,000 people and a mortality of 0.001 percent, the LNT predicts 1,270 increased cancer deaths. Of course the media would pick up on this fact as gospel, needlessly frightening the citizenry with fictitious threats of cancer and death.

Will there be bodies piled in the street? No. Do adherents to LNT have any evidence of these speculated deaths? No. On the order of 19 million cancer deaths would normally occur in the population, so we cannot test their prediction that deaths will increase by 0.001 percent of that total. Since this small number is not statistically significant, who can prove them wrong? (See the related article "The Effects of Low-does Radiation (http://thenewamerican.com/tech-mainmenu-30/environment/7267-the-effects-of-low-dose-radiation)" for the answer.)

Linear No Threshold theory applied to radiation is a shameful lie that causes huge outlays to “protect” the public against trivial amounts of exposure to radiation and is the primary reason behind a fear of nuclear power — promoted, in your correspondent’s opinion, by the radical environmentalists who wield enormous power in our federal and state governments, academia, the media, and, sadly, some of our country’s scientific and professional organizations.

Alpha and Beta Radiation

We have not looked at forms of radiation other than X-rays and gamma rays — both of which are part of the electromagnetic spectrum and essentially the same thing. There are two other forms of ionizing radiation that should be mentioned: alpha and beta particles. The former is a helium nucleus consisting of two protons and two neutrons making it an nuclear giant, while the latter is an electron that depends on a speed near that of light for its energy.

Alpha radiation cannot penetrate more than a few inches of air and is essentially benign unless it is loosed inside the body. Beta radiation cannot penetrate the skin, but can cause “beta burns” that are similar to sunburn. (The only reported radiation “injuries” at the Fukushima complex were caused when three workers waded in contaminated water higher than their boot tops. It is possible they had beta burns on their feet and ankles, but such information has not been made public.)

Neutrons are also always associated with nuclear fission. Though they are not in themselves ionizing particles, they can disrupt cellular activity with a result similar to all the aforementioned forms of radiation.

Isotopes and Half-lives

You may have noticed on news broadcasts that there is usually a number associated with the names of radioactive elements. For example, we hear of Iodine 131 being a dangerous product of fission. How is this different from the iodine our mothers put on our scrapes while we were screaming bloody murder? That iodine was primarily Iodine 127. Both are isotopes of iodine and both hurt when put on a scrape. But 131I (as it is usually designated) is highly radioactive. The Chart of the Elements on the chemistry class wall shows iodine as having the atomic number 53, since all isotopes of iodine have 53 protons. However, each isotope of iodine has a different number of neutrons, and the number of neutrons plus protons, which is known as the atomic mass, is the number assigned to the isotope. 127I has 74 neutrons, while 131I has 78. While chemically identical, the two are radically different in nuclear activity, with the former being stable and the latter radioactive.

Cobalt is another example. Ordinary cobalt, 59Co, is a metal often used to strengthen steel, but after being irradiated with neutrons for 18 months in a reactor, it is converted to highly radioactive 60Co — it is used in industrial radiography.

All radioactive atoms are destined to disintegrate. When an atom of 131I breaks up, it emits a beta particle and gamma rays and is transmuted into stable 131Xe — the noble gas xenon. The new atom is slightly lighter than the iodine atom, with the difference in weight being spent in energy emissions: radioactivity. The time it takes for half of the 131I to be transmuted to xenon is one half-life. For this nuclide the half-life is 8.02 days. After another half-life period, there is a quarter of the original iodine remaining. After 10 half-lives, less than one-tenth of a percent exists. Because of this short half-life, hospitals must be constantly renewing their supply of this useful radionuclide often used in thyroid diagnosis and ablation.

60Co goes through a similar beta decay and is transmuted to stable 60Ni. Its half-life is 5.27 years. Used for such processes as weld inspections and food irradiation, it also must be periodically replaced.

Since 131I gives up its energy much faster than 60Co, you would expect it to be more “radioactive” than the cobalt isotope. This indeed is the case and is related to the activity of the isotope.

Activity

Let us compare the number of disintegrations per second per gram of both the isotopes discussed above. This is called the specific activity of the sample and requires us to understand two additional measuring units. The Curie, named in honor of Madame Curie, who discovered both radium and polonium, is defined as 37 billion disintegrations per second for a single gram. (A gram is less than half the weight of a dime.) It tests the ability of the mind to comprehend the unimaginably small size of atoms when it takes 1,620 years at the beginning rate of 37 billion disintegrations per second for a gram of radium to lose half its mass. (Incidentally, Madame Curie never produced a whole gram of radium during her lifetime of refining and studying the element.)

The unit now used in the S.I. system is the Becquerel, which is defined as one disintegration per second. Hence one Curie (Ci) is equal to 37 billion Becquerels (Bq), not exactly the easiest conversion factor to work with.

For 60Co the activity is about 1,100 Curies! So the atoms of this isotope are changing into stable nickel at the rate of 1,100 times 37 billion, or 41 million billion, disintegrations per second.

But hold on to your hat. 131I checks in at 124,000 Ci, or 4,600 million billion Bq. And 133Te (tellurium) leaves the iodine isotope in the dust, with over a thousand times the disintegrations per second of iodine, and there are other much faster — and more radioactive — isotopes than Tellurium 133 with its half-life of 12.4 minutes.

So how dangerous are substances we usually think of as being highly radioactive, like that evil metal plutonium, which the media portrays as annihilating anyone within shouting distance? 239Pu, with a half-life of 242,100 years, has an activity of 0.063 Ci per gram, or a mere 2,300 billion disintegrations (Bq) per second — one two-millionth the disintegrations of 131I. What about the activity of uranium, which we’re taught to fear so fervently that we insist upon guarding “spent fuel” for hundreds of thousands of years due to its long-term radioactivity? With a half-life of 4.47 billion years, 238U gives up its energy grudgingly at a specific activity of 0.0000003 Ci, or 12,300 Bq. Furthermore, both it and 239Pu are alpha emitters whose radiation is stopped by a sheet of paper. But because uranium is radioactive for a near eternity, it is the poster child for anti-nuclear activists who rely on public ignorance of radiation dangers to undermine the energy industry or who errantly believe that long half-lives mean long-term danger — just the opposite of reality.

It is radioactive substances with short half-lives that are dangerous, but because of their short half-lives, they are not dangerous for long.

Forecast

So what will be the likely outcome of the nuclear meltdown, and the subsequent release of radioactive elements, in Japan? Once pumps are fully operational and structural damage to the nuclear power plant is repaired, the level of radiation from venting the containment vessels and from uncovered spent-fuel cooling ponds will quickly drop, as will airborne particles. Within a few months, the 131I deposited on the ground will decay to zero. Some 137Cs (cesium) will remain detectable on the ground, but at present it appears to be only a tenth the amount of that from the Chernobyl incident — and the amount from Chernobyl was on the same order of magnitude as the natural radionuclides in the soil.

Of course, anti-nuclear activists will predict thousands of cancer deaths based on the LNT, which will not happen, but no matter. Fear is the objective. As we have already seen, the Fukushima “disaster” will become the rallying cry against nuclear power. Few will remember that the plant stayed generally intact despite being hit by an earthquake with more than six times the energy the plant was designed to withstand, plus a tsunami estimated at 49 feet that swept away backup generators 33 feet above sea level. Wonder how those windmills would have stood up.

† The rate of exposure of one microsievert per hour is also commonly used and is equivalent to 876 mrem/year.



Ed Hiserodt is the author of Underexposed: What If Radiation Is Actually Good for You? (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0930073355/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=libert0f-20&linkCode=as2&camp=217145&creative=399349&creativeASIN=0930073355)


SOURCE:
http://thenewamerican.com/tech-mainmenu-30/environment/7257-fukushima-just-how-dangerous-is-radiation

FrankRep
04-27-2011, 08:23 AM
The National Center for Biotechnology Information


Boom:

Zbigniew Jaworowski, a member of the UN Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR), wrote (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2889503/) in Science in July 2001: “In 1958 UNSCEAR had no doubts about major genetic defects in the world population that could be caused by nuclear test fallout, and estimated them as high as 40,000. But now the Committee has learned that even among the children of highly irradiated survivors of atomic bombings no statistically significant genetic damage could be demonstrated (UNSCEAR 2001).”


Observations on the Chernobyl Disaster and LNT
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2889503/

Zippyjuan
04-27-2011, 12:23 PM
The radiation is dangers to those in the immediate area- no doubt. To those in this country there is little to no risk.

FrankRep
04-28-2011, 07:10 AM
http://www.thenewamerican.com/images/stories2011/09aApril/2709-cs-radiation.jpg



The Japanese are not alone in being exposed to low-dose radiation; everyone is exposed to radiation daily, emanating from our food, buildings, etc. — and that's the good news!


The Effects of Low-dose Radiation (http://thenewamerican.com/tech-mainmenu-30/environment/7267-the-effects-of-low-dose-radiation)


Ed Hiserodt | The New American (http://thenewamerican.com/)
28 April 2011


In 1990, the International Journal of Radiological Biology published a paper by M. Mine and his team of Japanese researchers entitled “Apparently beneficial effect of low to intermediate doses of A-Bomb radiation on human life-span.”† Mine’s team gleaned data from the “Health Handbook” that A-Bomb survivors were required to keep, recording every health change. They scrutinized data on over 80,000 subjects whose locations could be pinpointed at the time of the blasts, and determined the correlation between the relative risk of death and the dose of radiation received.

The study indicated quite the opposite of what was expected. The healthiest survivors were those who received approximately 10,000 mrem (millirems) of radiation in a very short time — a second or less. (See the main article, "Fukushima: Just How Dangerous Is Radiation? (http://www.thenewamerican.com/tech-mainmenu-30/environment/7257-fukushima-just-how-dangerous-is-radiation)" for a discussion of radiation dose measurements.) This is about three million times the highest dose rate of radiation in the exclusion zone adjacent to the Fukushima complex — which has been in the news because of the radioactive releases there resulting from the 9.0 earthquake and resulting tsunami. The amount of radiation received by the healthiest survivors is approximately equal to 105 years of radiation that one might now be exposed to in Tokyo at the current rate of 0.109 microsieverts per hour, which is causing foreigners to return home where radiation levels are in many cases, ironically, much higher than Tokyo.

http://thenewamerican.com/images/stories2011/09aApril/2709-cs2-figure1.jpg

Mine’s data, plotted in Figure 1 for males shows that up to 75,000 mrem — a massive amount compared even to what nuclear workers in Japan have received — resulted in lifespans longer than their unexposed peers. The graph shows each group’s relative risk — the exposed people who actually died compared to deaths in a similar unexposed cohort — as a function of the radiation dose. (The dose shown was from the blast only and didn’t include subsequent fallout or the increase in background radiation, factors that would indicate an even greater benefit for the exposed compared to the unexposed.)

The massive increase in cancer mortality predicted by Linear No Threshold theory (LNT) — the theory that the U.S. government relies upon to determine the danger posed by exposure to radiation — 20 to 30 years after exposure was clearly not valid. One would expect that government regulators and the radiation protection industry would be overjoyed at the results of this epidemiological blockbuster. That was not the case. The study did not change anything in the official treatment of radiation risks, even in Japan where the longevity of blast victims is common knowledge.

Hormesis

In 1980, unnoticed by most of the scientific community, T.D. Luckey, then-chairman of the biochemistry department at the University of Missouri Medical School, published a book entitled Hormesis With Ionizing Radiation (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0849358418/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=libert0f-20&linkCode=as2&camp=217145&creative=399349&creativeASIN=0849358418). It documented some thousand experiments where fungi and other lower life forms were seen to prosper with doses of radiation exceeding their normal background exposures. (Background radiation is ubiquitous — in the food we eat, the soil, buildings, and even our own blood.) A second book, in 1991, Radiation Hormesis, examined hundreds of studies on man and animals showing that low levels of radiation were beneficial to health, longevity, and reproduction.

http://thenewamerican.com/images/stories2011/09aApril/2709-cs2-hormesis.jpg

How does a known dangerous agent like ionizing radiation bring about healthful benefits? In the simplest terms: A low level of any stressful force tends to activate the body’s defenses. This is true for most, if not all, medicines. An aspirin tablet does not directly reduce headache or arthritis pain; it stimulates the body to create suppressants to prostaglandins that transmit pain to the brain. Similarly, inoculations do not directly prevent disease, but stimulate the immune systems to gird itself for battle in order to overwhelm a disease. Physiologically, radiation increases the production of lymphocytes, enhances the number of immune system helper T cells while inhibiting the suppressor T cells, and increases the activity of the p53 protein. (Please see your friendly biochemistry professor for answers to your questions on the last sentence.)

Luckey’s and Mine’s research spawned a worldwide interest in radiation hormesis, a term that Luckey popularized although it had been used earlier by non-radiation researchers in 1946. The International Dose-Response Society was formed at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst as a vehicle to provide a forum for research into both radiation and many chemical agents that exhibit the hormetic effect — the phenomenon that many agents are toxic in large amounts but are beneficial or therapeutic in smaller doses. Our bodies require vitamins and trace elements such as arsenic and selenium that are poisonous in large amounts. Salt exhibits similar effects — it’s required for life in small amounts but deadly in large ones. Even too much water can cause coma or death from a condition known as hyponatremia.

We certainly already knew about the health effects of another form of radiation: sunlight. Moderate amounts of sunlight cause the skin to produce Vitamin D, without which our health suffers and we develop a prison pallor. Above our optimum exposure, we get progressively painful burns and, as we know from victims staked to the desert floor in cowboy movies, death. Since sunlight, in particular the ultraviolet content, is the closest in the electromagnetic spectrum to X-rays, which in turn overlap with gamma rays from nuclear activity, it would be surprising if nature did not treat ionizing radiation similarly.

http://thenewamerican.com/images/stories2011/09aApril/2709-cs2-backradiation.jpg

Proving Out

Subsequent review of research papers — this time looking at the beneficial effects on the test subjects (mostly mice) — showed that the growth rate for mice was highest when they were exposed to 100,000 mrem of X-rays per day. Mice exposed to low doses of gamma or X-rays (and some not so low) had less leukemia mortality, and lower rates of both pituitary and lung cancer. Eighty percent of mice that were exposed to 50,000 mrem were alive 30 days after a second exposure of 740,000 mrem, while only eight percent of those who did not receive the “inoculatory” dose survived the month.

But it was taking a closer look at data on low-level radiation exposure on humans that was really eye-opening. Consistently, nuclear plant and fuel workers have less cancer and better health than the general population, and we’re not talking about just a token reduction. At the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Oakridge, Tennessee, where nuclear research has been conducted for the U.S. government since the WWII-era Manhattan Project, data from 200,000 man-years of work from 1950 to 1963 showed a reduction in mortality from 992 deaths predicted by the U.S. Bureau of Vital Statistics, to 692 actual deaths. In Los Alamos, workers exposed to 100 mrem of radiation had only 58 percent of the cancer mortality expected in the general population. And at the Rocky Flats weapons plant in Colorado, 7,112 plutonium workers employed from 1952 to 1979 had only 64 percent the expected deaths of the general population.

http://thenewamerican.com/images/stories2011/09aApril/2709-cs2-figure2.jpg

Shipyard Workers

In 1980, a Department of Energy contract was granted to the Department of Epidemiology at Johns Hopkins University to examine the “Health Effect of Low Level Radiation in Shipyard Workers.” The study was expected to show an increase in cancer mortality in those employees who worked on nuclear vessels when compared to fellow workers who were assigned to non-nuclear ships. No chance here of a skewed study as a result of “healthy worker effects” — where healthier workers are preferred over less healthy ones — as they were hired at random from the same employment line.

The initial pool of examinees consisted of 700,000 workers, including 104,000 nuclear workers at two private and six government shipyards. To insure comparable cohorts, the list was pared down to 72,356 subjects. Workers were divided into three categories:

• The non-nuclear workers (“Nones” in Figure 2), comprised of 33,352 employees, were used as the controls.

• Those who had cumulative exposures of less than 500 mrem, whom we will refer to as the “Lows,” totaled 10,462 workers.

• The 28,542 workers who exceeded the 500 mrem benchmark are designated “Highs.”

Let’s get some perspective here. National opinion polls that are used to influence public policy are often based on 1,000 “likely voters.” These polls get rapt attention from the media. This study is based on 72,000 individuals chosen because they had common attributes with others in the study. Selection was scientific, not random as in most opinion polls.

This investigation, known by radiation protection professionals as “the largest study that never was,” is so named because of the many years it was not published after completion. Why? The government had commissioned an investigation to show how low-level radiation caused cancer, but the data showed just the opposite. (U.S. government agencies have a radiation protection policy based entirely on LNT theory.) What is an investigator going to do? He waffles and postpones publication, hoping no one will remember the study was done. But some people did remember.

The statistic that sticks in the mind of most everyone who has studied the report is shown on the bar graphs of Figure 2. For deaths from all causes, the Nones registered exactly what they should have: the same mortality as the general population. (This factor gives credence to the methodology of the investigation.) The Lows had 81 percent of their expected mortality. Incredibly the Highs had only 76 percent of their expected death rates. Remember, all three cohorts mingled in the same employment lines, but some were lucky enough to be called to work on nuclear ships.

http://thenewamerican.com/images/stories2011/09aApril/2709-cs2-figure3.jpg

Radiation and Breast Cancer

Published in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1989, an investigation by A.B. Miller and associates charted the doses received by 37,710 Canadian women who were irradiated in the course of repeated fluoroscopic breast examinations between 1930 and 1952. In the case of the cohort from Nova Scotia, examinations were made facing the X-ray source, resulting in a dose about 25 times that of those who were facing away. With accumulated doses in the hundreds of thousand millirems, their cancer rate followed predictions of the LNT.

But those who received cumulative doses of 10,000 to 30,000 mrem saw their relative risk of breast cancer death drop to as low as 66 percent of that of an unexposed woman of similar background. Figure 3 presents the data that caused Myron Polycove, M.D.‡ to remark:


The decreased risk rate of breast cancer produced by low dose, low level radiation were rejected a priori by the choice of mathematical models that extrapolate the dose-risk relation from high dose exposures to low dose exposures.

In case you missed it, he is speaking here to the fallacy of LNT. Dr. Polycove continues:


Nine hundred excess deaths from cancer are predicted theoretically from the exposure of one million women to 0.15 Gy [15,000 mrem]. However, the quantified low dose data predicts with better than 99% confidence limits that instead of causing 900 deaths, a dose of 0.15 Gy would prevent 10,000 deaths in those million women.

Nobody — no government agency, no academic society, no anti-cancer organization — argues with these figures. The figures are merely ignored, as they don’t pass the politically correct test that all radiation is dangerous and that it only takes one gamma ray to cause cancer.

One must wonder with a breaking heart as to how many of our friends and relatives who succumbed to breast cancer could have been saved by the painless, nearly free, only-takes-a-minute application of low-dose radiation as a simple preventative measure.

http://thenewamerican.com/images/stories2011/09aApril/2709-cs2-figure4.jpg

Hold Your Breath, 
Radon Is All Around You

We were introduced to Professor Bernie Cohen in the cover story, where he pointed out an inordinate number of news stories on radiation that caused no deaths, and far fewer articles on automobile accidents causing hundreds of thousands fatalities. Besides a background in nuclear physics, he is renowned as a master of “risk analysis.” He directed a project of Pittsburgh University that was expected to document the dangers of radon in increasing the risks of lung cancer. Soon after his first data were accumulated, he found that his results were diametrically opposite to predictions from the LNT. (That’s when he shut off power to his personal $1,200 radon reduction system.)

His initial five-year investigation covered 1,729 counties, comprising about 90 percent of the United States. It considered radon data from the EPA and state agencies, and 272,000 measurements by Pitt researchers. The research found that instead of increased cancer with the increased presence of radon, the cancer rate decreased significantly as noted in Figure 4.

Radon, in particular Radon 222, has a half-life of only 3.8 days. Radioisotopes with short half-lives are extremely radioactive. Radon is a decay product of radium, which in turn comes from naturally occurring Uranium 238. It is generally believed (by those who exaggerate nuclear dangers) that radon, when drawn into the lungs, delivers a fatal, cancerous blow to lung tissue.

This is certainly the position of the EPA. However in the spa area of Bad Gadstein, Austria, they have a different opinion. In use since Roman days and known for its healthful properties, the spa has 1,000 times the radon levels considered by the EPA as requiring remediation.

The activity of an element is designated in Curies (Ci). When the Curie is used for small activities, the term picoCurie is used — sometimes designated as a micro-micro Curie to note that it is one trillionth of a Curie. The activity of air in a residence is usually measured in picoCuries per liter (pCi/l).

Dr. Cohen’s study showed that between zero and six pCi/l — a normal range for U.S. residences — cancer rates decreased for men and women, both smokers and non-smokers. This was in direct contradiction to the EPA prediction using LNT. The difference is put forth by Cohen and his supporters as “our discrepancy,” with the challenge that unless “our discrepancy is resolved, the LNT is in error.” No other researcher has yet mounted a credible challenge.

Pity the People

Over the past weeks we have seen a tragedy of epic proportions in Japan. Thousands were drowned or crushed by the power of rushing water. Millions are homeless and in a state of trauma from exposure and grief. And yet most of the news has been about radiation leaks that have not caused a single death, even among the workers on site. We cannot blame people for their fear of radiation, as they have had it force-fed to them under the category of “unspeakable danger.” All we can do is provide facts when the adherents to the LNT theory are promoting a climate of fear.

Yes, radiation in large doses can be dangerous. But in low doses, study after study shows that it not only it does not cause cancer, it decreases the susceptibility of the individual to contract the disease. This is the message we must get out if we are to take advantage of nuclear power and nuclear medicine — true blessings to mankind.

† International Journal of Radiological Biology, 58:1035, 1990.

‡ Dr. Polycove is an internationally known expert on the health effects of radiation, having served as a visiting medical fellow on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and professor emeritus in laboratory medicine and radiology at UC San Francisco. He also serves as head of the nuclear medicine department at San Francisco General Hospital.

Editor’s note: Citations for the numerous investigations touched on in this article are in Ed Hiserodt’s book, Underexposed: What if Radiation Is Actually Good for You? (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0930073355/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=libert0f-20&linkCode=as2&camp=217145&creative=399349&creativeASIN=0930073355), a two-year effort including numerous interviews across the United States and research at Hanford, Oak Ridge, and the Library of Congress.


Related article:

Fukushima: Just How Dangerous Is Radiation (http://www.thenewamerican.com/tech-mainmenu-30/environment/7257-fukushima-just-how-dangerous-is-radiation)


SOURCE:
http://thenewamerican.com/tech-mainmenu-30/environment/7267-the-effects-of-low-dose-radiation