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RE: Radon in the News -Reply



Didn't a lot of the miners smoke also?

Mark C. Hammond
Health Physicist
Arkansas Department of Health
Division of Radiation Control
and Emergency Management
4815 West Markham, Slot #30
Little Rock, Arkansas 72205
(800) 482-5400 ext. 2865 or
(501) 661-2865

-----Original Message-----
From:	Michael S Ford [SMTP:MFORD@pantex.com]
Sent:	Wednesday, September 16, 1998 12:25 PM
To:	Multiple recipients of list
Subject:	Radon in the News -Reply

Since I'm feeling *particularly* dense today, would someone from
radon community please explain to me how radon has been
singled out as the only causative agent for lung cancer deaths in U
miners when:

1.  At the time of the studies (beginning circa 1875 to 1960's), U
miners did not (and still don't for the most part) wear respirators.

2.  If they did not wear respirators, the were then exposed to U dust,
other types of ore dust, exhaust fumes with known carcinogens and
other sundry harmful agents.

I asked this of folks in the US Mine Safety and Health
Administration following their recent Federal Register release on
radon exposure records and got no response whatsoever to my
query.  Hmmmm....

Thanks for getting me spun up, Andy!  ;-)
v/r
Michael
*************************
Michael S. Ford, CHP
Texas Radiation Advisory Board
Address:
Radiation Safety Department
Battelle Pantex
Amarillo, TX
806.477.5727 phone
806.477.4198 fax
mford@pantex.com
*************************
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The RADSAFE Frequently Asked Questions list, archives and subscription
information can be accessed at http://www.ehs.uiuc.edu/~rad/radsafe.html