[ RadSafe ] World's Pilots Reject Naked Body Scanners>Over Radiation Danger, Privacy Breach
garyi at trinityphysics.com
garyi at trinityphysics.com
Tue Nov 9 19:19:26 CST 2010
Hi Mike,
Your post made me wonder if anyone had studied cancer
mortality for pilots. So I googled "pilots radiation mortality" and
got (suprise!) more evidence for hormesis:
Cosmic radiation and cancer mortality among airline
pilots: results from a European cohort study (ESCAPE),
Radiation and Environmental Biophysics Volume 42,
Number 4, 247-256, DOI: 10.1007/s00411-003-0214-7
Abstract:
Cosmic radiation is an occupational risk factor for
commercial aircrews. In this large European cohort
study (ESCAPE) its association with cancer mortality
was investigated on the basis of individual effective dose
estimates for 19,184 male pilots. Mean annual doses
were in the range of 2-5 mSv and cumulative lifetime
doses did not exceed 80 mSv. All-cause and all-cancer
mortality was low for all exposure categories. A
significant negative risk trend for all-cause mortality was
seen with increasing dose. Neither external and internal
comparisons nor nested case-control analyses showed
any substantially increased risks for cancer mortality due
to ionizing radiation. However, the number of deaths for
specific types of cancer was low and the confidence
intervals of the risk estimates were rather wide.
Difficulties in interpreting mortality risk estimates for
time-dependent exposures are discussed.
Another study of Canadian pilots found this:
Statistically significant decreased mortality was
observed for all causes (SMR = 0.63, 90% confidence
interval (CI) 0.56-0.70), for all cancers (SMR = 0.61,
90% CI 0.48-0.76), and for all noncancer diseases
(SMR = 0.53, 90% CI 0.45-0.62).
You have wonder, with data like that, what are the pilots
complaining about?
-Gary Isenhower
On 9 Nov 2010 at 16:50, Brennan, Mike (DOH) wrote:
For a long time I have felt that as anyone who is on a
commercial flight crew should have the training necessary to
understand the radiation dose they receive as a (mostly)
unavoidable result of their occupation. It really shouldn't be that
difficult or take that long, and it will reduce anxiety and
misunderstanding. If it had already been done this issue would
be easier to deal with.
I also have long thought that there should be a separate line
with a much reduced screening regime for "prescreened"
people. There are a number of criteria that could be used for
prescreening, including some sort of background check, and
flight crews would be an obvious group to go through such a
program.
I am surprised that the scanners would take three minutes per
person. That clearly is too long.
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