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タグ「long-term health effects」

Hygienic problems of reducing the remote medical effects of exposure on population at nuclear accidents (on the materials of the Chernobyl accident)

Author: N.K. Shandala

Reference: Abstract, Moscow 1997, HAC Russia 14.00.07

Keywords: hygiene, reduce negative effect

Abstract: Aim of research: Substantiation of hygienic bases to reduce remote negative medical effects of exposure on population at large-scale communal nuclear accident.

URL: http://medical-diss.com/medicina/gigenicheskie-problemy-umensheniya-otdalennyh-meditsinskih-posledstviy-oblucheniya-naseleniya-pri-atomnyh-avariyah-na-mat

Estimated long-term health effects

Title: Estimated long-term health effects

Author: Cardis, F. [International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon (France)] / Okeanov, A.E. [AN Belorusskoj SSR, Minsk (Belarus)] / Likthariev, I. / Prisyazhniuk

Reference: Conference: International conference on one decade after Chernobyl: summing up the radiological consequences of the accident, Vienna;  1996 Apr 1996

Keywords: long-term health effects

Abstract: Apart from the dramatic increase in thyroid cancer in those exposed as children, there is no evidence to date of a major public health impact of the radiation exposure from the Chernobyl accident in the three most affected countries. Although some increases in the frequency of cancer in exposed populations have been reported, these results are difficult to interpret, mainly because of differences in the intensity and method of follow-up between exposed populations and the general population to which they are compared. If the experience of atomic bomb survivors and of other exposed populations is applicable, the major radiological impact of the accident will be cancer and the total lifetime numbers of excess cancers will be greatest among the liquidators and among the residents of contaminated territories, of the order of 2,000 to 2,500. These increases would be difficult to detect epidemiologically against an expected background number of 41,500 and 433,000 respectively (size of the exposed populations: 200,000 and 3,700,000, respectively). It is noted, however, that the exposures received by populations exposed as a result of Chernobyl are different (in type and pattern) from those of atomic bomb survivors. Predictions derived from these populations are therefore uncertain. Indeed, the extent of the increase in thyroid cancer incidence in persons exposed as children was not foreseen. In addition, only ten years have passed since the accident. It is essential therefore that monitoring of the health of the population be continued in order to assess the public health impact of the accident, even if, apart from leukemia among liquidators, little detectable increase of cancers due to radiation from the Chernobyl accident is expected.

URL: http://www.osti.gov/bridge/product.biblio.jsp?query_id=2&page=0&osti_id=273753

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