AW: [ RadSafe ] Pilot of Enola Gay Had No Regrets for Hiroshima
Rainer.Facius at dlr.de
Rainer.Facius at dlr.de
Fri Nov 2 04:34:46 CDT 2007
Stewart,
in a PowerPoint presentation given by A L Brooks May 24th 2004 I find the following numbers:
Population of ATB Survivors Studied: 86,572
Total Cancers Observed after the Bomb: 8,180
Total Cancers Expected without Bomb: 7,743
Total Cancer Excess: 437
The total Cancer Excess of 437 is made up of 334 solid tumor cases and 104 leukemia cases.
The German Newspaper DIE WELT published on Aug. 6th, 2005 the following numbers:
Total Cancers Observed after the Bomb: 10127
Total Cancers Expected without Bomb: 9648
Total Cancer Excess: 479
HTH
Best regards, Rainer
Dr. Rainer Facius
German Aerospace Center
Institute of Aerospace Medicine
Linder Hoehe
51147 Koeln
GERMANY
Voice: +49 2203 601 3147 or 3150
FAX: +49 2203 61970
________________________________
Von: radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl im Auftrag von stewart farber
Gesendet: Fr 02.11.2007 06:59
An: radsafe at radlab.nl
Betreff: [ RadSafe ] Pilot of Enola Gay Had No Regrets for Hiroshima
National Public Radio on its All Things Considered show on Nov. 1st, ran a segment about the death of Paul Tibbets, pilot of the Enola Gay. See below for link:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=15858203&sc=emaf
Tibbets was 92 and never wavered in his belief that the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was necessary to quickly end the war and save lives. He said he had no regrets and dismissed as "hogwash" any suggestion that the attack was morally wrong.
Of note on the subject of radiation risks, the NPR report by Melissa Block and Robert Siegel stated incorrectly that "tens of thousands of Japanese died from long-term effects of radioactive fallout".
I wrote NPR's "All Things Considered" a response using their feedback mechanism, citing data from the ABCC that excess cancer deaths in the 60,000 people followed long-term by the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission documented about a 5% increase in cancer mortality, and about a 1% increase in total mortality -- a total of about 500 deaths through 1990. Their suggestion of "tens of thousands" of radiation related deaths long-term after the initial deaths due to blast, shock, and radiation exposure was an exaggeration and simply wrong.
Does anyone have more current summary cancer mortality data on the ABCC studies of the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki from 1990 to present? Thanks for any feedback on this point that people can offer me since my references are a bit dated.
Stewart Farber, MS Public Health
Consulting Scientist
Farber Medical Solutions, LLC
Bridgeport, CT 06604
[203] 441-8433 [office]
email: radproject at sbcglobal.net
website: http://www.farber-medical.com <http://www.farber-medical.com/>
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