[ RadSafe ] Panel Affirms Radiation Link to Cancer
Whitman, Richard T
richard.t.whitman at dhs.gov
Wed Jun 29 23:48:13 CEST 2005
MSNBC reported "the committee examined doses of radiation of up to 100
millsieverts..." implying radiation workers, not the public or public
exposure limits....so once again we extrapolate into zaniness.
Rick Whitman
____________________Reply Separator____________________
Subject: RE: [ RadSafe ] Panel Affirms Radiation Link to Cancer
Author: radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl
Date: 6/29/2005 2:13 PM
Where is this report published and what studies did they review
to come
up with this conclusion?
-----Original Message-----
From: radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl
[mailto:radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl] On
Behalf Of Sandy Perle
Sent: Wednesday, June 29, 2005 9:43 AM
To: radsafe; powernet at hps1.org
Subject: [ RadSafe ] Panel Affirms Radiation Link to Cancer
Comments?
Panel Affirms Radiation Link to Cancer
By H. JOSEF HEBERT, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The preponderance of scientific evidence shows
that even
very low doses of radiation pose a risk of cancer or other
health
problems and there is no threshold below which exposure can be
viewed
as harmless, a panel of prominent scientists concluded
Wednesday.
The finding by the National Academy of Sciences panel is
viewed as
critical because it is likely to significantly influence what
radiation levels government agencies will allow at abandoned
nuclear
power plants, nuclear weapons production facilities and
elsewhere.
The nuclear industry,, as well as some independent scientists,
have
argued that there is a threshold of very low level radiation
where
exposure is not harmful, or possibly even beneficial. They said
current risk modeling may exaggerate the health impact.
The panel, after five years of study, rejected that claim.
"The scientific research base shows that there is no threshold
of
exposure below which low levels of ionized radiation can be
demonstrated to be harmless or beneficial," said Richard R.
Monson,
the panel chairman and a professor of epidemiology at Harvard's
School of Public Health.
The committee gave support to the so-called "linear, no
threshold"
model that is currently the generally acceptable approach to
radiation risk assessment. This approach assumes that the
health
risks from radiation exposure declines as the dose levels
decline,
but that each unit of radiation - no matter how small - still
is
assumed to cause cancer.
The panel, formally known as the Committee on Biological
Effects of
Ionizing Radiaton, or BEIR, generally supported previous cancer
risk
estimates - the last one by an earlier BEIR group in 1990.
Contrary to assertions that risks from exposure from low-level
radiation may have been overstated, the panel said "the
availability
of new and more extensive data have strengthened confidence in
these
(earlier) estimates."
The committee examined doses of radiation of up to 100
millisievert,
a measurement of accumulated radiation to an individual over a
year.
By comparison, a single chest X-ray accounts for 0.1
millisievert and
average background radiation 3 millisievert.
The committee estmated that 1 out of 100 people would likely
develop
solid cancer or leukemia from an exposure of 100 millisievert
of
radiation over a lifetime.
-------------------------------------
Sandy Perle
Senior Vice President, Technical Operations
Global Dosimetry Solutions, Inc.
2652 McGaw Avenue
Irvine, CA 92614
Tel: (949) 296-2306 / (888) 437-1714 Extension 2306
Fax:(949) 296-1902
E-Mail: sperle at dosimetry.com
E-Mail: sandyfl at earthlink.net
Global Dosimetry Website: http://www.dosimetry.com/
Personal Website: http://sandy-travels.com/
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