Compendium of evidence: introduction
Evidence of health hazard from low level radiation which suggests
that the ICRP / NRPB model is seriously inadequate for predicting
hazard from internal radiation.
The science of low dose radiation risk is a slow motion re-enactment
of the paradigm shift that has overtaken the understanding of BSE.
In a decade or so BSE has moved from being identified as a possible
problem, through official reassurances, to the realisation that those
reassurances were unfounded, and so to long-running political embarrassment.
The problem is that there has been very little actual measurement
of the effects of internal radio-isotopes. In its absence, official
agencies have to make assumptions about internal radiation based on
epidemiological studies of the effects of external radiation
and to guess at the specific biological effects of individual
isotopes on the basis of their physical characteristics.
This has led to the adoption of a crude average dose model which completely
overlooks the local dose to tissue from immobilised isotopes whose
energy is deposited in microscopically small volumes of tissue.
Essentially, this is a matter of research which has not been done.
As Dr. Lynne Jones, MP recently wrote to the U. K. Health Minister:
We divide the evidence into four categories:
Within each category the citations are in no particular order. Link to references
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Introduction
The story of radiation risk has unfolded over the past 100 years.
Half a century ago the radiation protection community acquired grave
new responsibilities when the nuclear arms race polluted the entire
planet with a whole new class of matter the artificial radio-isotopes.
The peculiar characteristics of internal radiation from these man-made
substances have been controversial ever since the internal risk
committee (Cttee. II) of the US National Committee on Radiological
Protection saw its work set aside in 1951 after some years of deadlock
(Caufield 1989)
There is a little evidence that low level radiation
is dangerous, and rather less to show that it is not.
Dr Jones was nearly right - in fact there is a large quantity
of evidence that genetic damage is far greater than expected. This
paper is only a sample. Other workers
(Nussbaum 1994)
have made a
similar survey which is available on the US Government's internet
services.
1) studies on which radiation protection standards are
based, and those which undermine them:
2) epidemiological studies showing a risk not accounted
for by NRPB/ ICRP model
3) studies which are said to demonstrate that there is
no unappreciated risk but which have demonstrable flaws or which do,
in fact, show an excess risk.
4) animal studies showing existence of biological mechanisms which are not well understood
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