ヘッダー画像

タグ「Medical care」

Consequences of the Chernobyl accident: 20 years later (from international forum of IAEA in Vienna, 2005)

Author: Balonov M.I.

Reference: Bulletin “РАДИАЦИЯ И РИСК” (Radiation and risk), 2006

ISSN: 0131-3878

Keywords: radiation level in environment, radioecology

Abstract: The Chernobyl Forum (September, 2005) concluded that in 20 years after the Chernobyl accident along with reduction of radiation levels and accumulation of humanitarian consequences severe social and economic depression of the affected regions and associated serious psychological problems became the most significant problems. The majority of the 600000 emergency and recovery operation workers and five million residents of the contaminated areas in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine received relatively minor radiation doses which are comparable with the natural levels. An exception is a cohort of several hundred emergency and recovery operation workers who received high radiation doses, of whom 28 died in 1986 due to acute radiation sickness and it consequences. Except dramatic increase in thyroid cancer morbidity in those exposed to radioiodine in their childhood and some increase in leukaemia and solid cancer morbidity among emergency and recovery operation workers with high radiation dose no evident growth of radiation-associated cancer diseases and leukaemia was detected in other groups of population. Radiation levels in the environment have reduced by a factor of several hundred since 1986, this ensures that the majority of the previously contaminated land in now safe for life and economic activities. Despite unprecedented scale and character of the Chernobyl accident its consequences for health and life of the affected population are significantly less compared with A-bombing in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Findings of research of consequences of the Chernobyl accident made invaluable contribution to the development of nuclear technology and safety, radioecology, radiation medicine, radiological protection and social sciences. The Chernobyl accident initiated development of the global nuclear safety and radiation protection regime.

URL: http://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=11730468

Ten-year Chernobyl aid programmes of the Otto Hug Strahleninstitut-MHM: treatment and research projects on thyroid cancer in Belarus

 

Title: Ten-year Chernobyl aid programmes of the Otto Hug Strahleninstitut-MHM: treatment and research projects on thyroid cancer in Belarus

Author: Lengfelder, Edmund / Demidchik, Evgueni P. / Demidchik, Yuri E. / Sidorov, Yury D. / Gedrevich, Zigmund E. / Birukova, Ludmila W. / Gamolina, Larisa I. / (…) / Frenzel, Christine

Reference: International Congress Series, 1234, p.201-204, May 2002

doi: 10.1016/S0531-5131(01)00609-4

Keywords: Chernobyl; Thyroid cancer; Thyroid pathology; Medical care; Tissue bank

Abstract: The unexpected serious increase in the incidence of thyroid cancer following the reactor accident in Chernobyl led to considerable research efforts from abroad and the support of Belarus in order to mitigate these health problems. In 1991, the Otto Hug Strahleninstitut-MHM (Otto Hug Radiation Institute), a German non-governmental medical–scientific charity organization, started several long-term aid programmes and treatment and research projects on thyroid cancer and other diseases of this organ. Since 1993, the project “Thyroid Center Gomel” had more than 70 000 patients from this region for the diagnosis and treatment of thyroid diseases including cancer. …More than 6500 thyroid tumours were diagnosed, preparing over 30 000 pathological slides. In 1997, the project of “Radioiodine Therapy” started in Gomel, giving treatment to more than 450 patients since that time. …

URL:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0531513101006094

▲ページの先頭へ戻る