Author: Trisha Pritikin

  • Downwinders Eligible for Worker Compensation and Health Care

    As seen in media accounts posted onto Downwinders onelist, the Hanford offsite exposure health hearings were held the last week of January in Kennewick, Washington. Almost 200 people were in attendance.

    In spite of numerous requests, the Department of Energy has refused thusfar to hold site hearings (like the worker site hearings held over the last two years) on offsite exposures and health problems. This hearing was therefore convened by the Hanford Health Effects Subcommittee and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR).

    The verbatim transcript and videotape of the testimony made during this hearing provide clear evidence of significant health problems amongst offsite exposed populations, as requested by the DOE. To many, of course, provision of further evidence would seem unnecessary, as many family members of nuclear workers, who themselves suffer today from cancers, autoimmune thyroiditis, other autoimmune disorders, and other serious health problems, testified during the DOE site hearings on worker health problems held over the past two years. This evidence of offsite exposure health problems, and serious health problems amongst Nevada Test site exposed populations who are not currently eligible for any kind of help within the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) is already out there. Why are we asked by the DOE for even further evidence to be provided?

    We want to be clear that we are very supportive of compensation and health care for those within the DOE nuclear complex who have developed cancers and other serious health problems which are more likely than not caused by their exposures on site. But, there are those exposed outside the site fenceline who have developed the same cancers and other health problems as have developed in workers, and who have been subjected to the same exposure health risk as workers.

    If these individuals were nuclear workers, rather than offsite exposed persons, they would be eligible under the new DOE compensation and health care initiative. To deprive these eligible individuals of government help based on the fact that they were exposed outside rather than inside the site fenceline is not only illogical but entirely unjust.

    EQUAL EXPOSURE HEALTH RISK, UNEQUAL TREATMENT

    THE TEST CASE: The only radionuclide for which “official” reconstructed doses have been provided by the government, is radioiodine, or I-131. Currently, estimated, reconstructed I-131 doses are available for those exposed to Hanford nuclear reservation historic offsite airborne releases, for Nevada Test Site atomic test fallout releases, and for Oak Ridge offsite plus Nevada Test Site I-131 releases, combined.

    It is for this reason, that radioiodine logically serves as the test case for inclusion within the DOE health care and compensation initiative, of offsite exposed persons who qualify within the eligibility criteria defined for that initiative.

    DOWNWINDERS MEET ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA

    Under the DOE nuclear worker compensation and health care initiative, the exposure to the worker in question must fall within guidelines for determining whether the worker’s cancer was at least “as likely as not” to have been caused by his or her exposure on the job.

    The determination of exposure dose received for workers provides workers with a range of possible doses, when worker exposure records are not available. Eligibility under the new law requires that the specified cancer be “at least as likely as not” related to exposure on the job. This is based upon a reconstructed radiation dose at the upper 99% confidence limit of the estimate of probability of causation in the published radioepidemiological tables. Probability of causation refers to the probability that an exposure resulted in the cancer or other health outcome that a person now has.

    Where is the logic or the justice in depriving involuntarily exposed members of offsite populations (which includes, of course, those exposed to Nevada Test Site fallout, which contained I-131 as well as a range of other biologically significant radionuclides) of this compensation or health care if certain offsite exposed persons (“downwinders”) have cancers or any other health problems which are within the recognized list of health problems of the DOE nuclear worker initiative, and if these individuals also have reconstructed doses which, when translated to probability of causation, would qualify them for compensation and health care if these individuals were nuclear workers?

    These were involuntary exposures. These were very often childhood exposures. These infants and children were exposed before they even had a chance to say NO.

    People who were children in the l950s and l960s were exposed involuntarily to several significant sources of I-131:

    l. Nevada Test Site: (1951-1957) released 150 million curies of I-131, along with a range of other biologically significant radionuclides.

    2. Marshall Islands (l952-1958) thermonuclear tests released 8 billion curies of I-131.

    3. Former USSR- ( 1958-62) thermonuclear tests released 12 billion curies of I-131, much of which deposited globally.

    These doses must be added together, each within an uncertainty range, in order to obtain a person’s total exposure dose, for a particular radionuclide (in this test case, I-131). It is well known that one predictor of radiogenic thyroid disease is the size of the thyroid as vs the size of the dose. A baby’s or child’s tiny thyroid absorbs virtually all of the radioiodine over its decay time, delivering therefore a dose twenty times the dose to an adult thyroid.

    Note that radioiodine is only one of a range of biologically significant radionuclides released from local DOE sites, released within Nevada Test Site fallout, from Marshall Islands tests, and from tests in the former Soviet Union. All of these sources contributed to the overall dose, and exposure health risk to which people were involuntarily subjected.

    Thusfar, only one radionuclide, I-131, has been addressed by our government. There is significant danger than, unless the public loudly and repeatedly demands that the other biologically significant radionuclides be addressed as well, through government funded provision of estimated, added doses and health risk from exposure to these other radionuclides, that I-131 is the only radionuclide for which we will EVER have any sort of dose information. Dose information is required before dose can be translated into probability of causation for offsite populations who have existing potentially radiogenic disease. If only I-131 doses are provided (at the present time, Marshall Island and former USSR I-131 fallout doses have NOT been provided), those exposed offsite will forever be kept from the knowledge of their true exposures, and from knowing how those exposures may have damaged their health. Why should workers be given this information, and helped by our government, while their children, friends and neighbors who were subjected to the same exposure health risk, are left out in the cold?

    ALERTING CONGRESS, THE MEDIA, AND THE PUBLIC

    We must alert the media, Members of Congress, and others concerned with the welfare of people whose lives have been damaged by the legacy of bomb production and testing in this country, to the need to include offsite exposed people who meet the eligibility criteria for exposed workers within the DOE nuclear workers compensation and health care initiative, to the importance of providing these offsite exposed individuals (including Nevada Test Site exposed) with the health care and government funded help they need and deserve.

    These individuals exposed outside the fenceline have sacrificed and suffered for our country no less than those who were exposed within the fenceline.

    Trisha Pritikin

    Daughter of Hanford nuclear workers

  • Radiation Fallout Exposures: Demand for Full Disclosure

    It is a little known fact amongst members of the public that people who were alive, and particularly, who were in childhood, during the late l940s, the 1950s, and into the l960s, were subjected involuntarily to multiple radioactive fallout exposures right here in the United States. Even worse, these radioactive fallout exposures added on top of one another, coming from several sources.

    If one were to question a cross section of the public, chances are that few people would be aware of the fact that Nevada Test Site (NTS) fallout drifted across many portions of the United States. Adding to those NTS fallout exposures which began in l951 were further radioactive clouds from global fallout- fallout from atomic tests conducted in the l950s in the Marshall Islands, Chinese tests, and nuclear tests conducted in the former Soviet Union in the early l960s.

    Most people are aware of the Three Mile Island (TMI) nuclear reactor accident and its resulting offsite radiation emissions which released an estimated 12-15 curies of I-131 (radioactive iodine) onto surrounding communities.

    These exposures have been followed by reports of health problems in TMI exposed populations, by questions as to the validity of “official” I-131 release estimates, and inquiries as to whether other radioactive substances were also released. The Three Mile Island accident woke many Americans up to the possibility of health hazards of environmental radiation exposure from nuclear facilities close to home.

    I now ask the reader to sit down- the following figures are shocking. Twelve to fifteen curies of I-131 is bad enough, particularly when exposures were suffered by infants and children, during their most radiosensitive period of life. Now try somehow to conceive of the fact that the Nevada Test Site atomic tests released 150 million curies of I-131, which deposited throughout many portions of the US, and into Canada. Add to that the 8 billion curies of I-131 from US tests conducted in the Marshall Islands in the l950s, some of which drifted over the US, and the 12 billion curies of I-131 which were released in the early 1960s from tests in the former Soviet Union. Add to that releases from individual former Atomic Energy Commission sites such as Oak Ridge, Hanford (released 900,000 curies of I-131), Savannah River, Idaho National Engineering Lab and others, all part of the Manhattan Project’s atomic bomb building factory, for those who lived within the downwind areas of these sites. Then, once again, add to that staggering total, exposures to other radioactive substances within fallout which are known to be health harming (or, “biologically significant”).

    Perhaps the most disturbing part of this picture is the ethical/human rights issue involved. We have the right to expect a proper and adequate response from our government for these government-caused involuntary exposures and the painful health problems which may have resulted from these exposures. We should, at the very least, demand full disclosure of the extent of exposures- that is, our government should provide to us our added doses, and translation of these combined doses into health risk. This, at a very minimum.

    The national media has paid much attention to the unprecedented efforts bythe Department of Energy (DOE) to gain compensation for certain nuclear workers who suffered exposures on the job which have resulted in health problems. I applaud Secretary Richardson, DOE Secretary, for doing the right thing for at least some of the nuclear workers.

    And, now it is time for the public to know that one did not have to be a nuclear worker to receive significant, health damaging, combined exposures to radioactive substances, in this case, contained within fallout. Anyone who was alive during the period of atmospheric testing at the Nevada Test Site, in the Marshall Islands, and during Chinese and Russian tests, got the combined exposures to the range of radioactive substances which were airborne and deposited within the US.

    If you were in childhood during that period of time, you were dosed even more than an adult due to increased radiation uptake of a developing child. If you drank milk (whether cow’s or goat’s milk), your dose was substantially increased over that which you inhaled or ingested due to I-131 deposits on your food. Some peoples’ exposures, when the doses are added, were truly substantial, some peoples’ were not as high. Right now, the public has no idea what their true dose from these combined radioactive substances was, or what health risk these fallout doses present. In fact, most Americans do not even know they were exposed. We don’t even have an effort underway by the government to calculate the doses of those at greatest health risk from combined exposures to just one of the radioactive substances, I-131.

    Why hasn’t our government told us of these exposures? There is a program under development by the National Cancer Institue (NCI) to inform people of their I-131 exposures from the NTS, but that program will not provide combined I-131 doses and health risk from NTS I-131 plus other sources of exposure to the public. Neither will that program let people know their exposures to the other potentially health damaging radioactive substances released within NTS fallout.

    From this NCI I-131 communications program, we will be given just one part of the picture- I-131 exposures, and just from NTS testing. There may not be translation of these I-131 NTS doses into health risk. Representative doses (not individual doses) that people may have received from just one of the radionuclides released, I-131, and from just one I-131 exposure source, NTS, are posted on the National Cancer Institute website, without health risk information. It’s a start, but this is only one small part of the big picture of fallout exposures and radiation induced disease that these exposures may have caused in this country.

    Approximately $1.85 million was appropriated by Congress, thanks to the efforts of Senator Harkin’s (D-IA) office, to address fallout issues- this has turned into what is called a “feasibility” study- that is, an assessment of whether it is possible to add doses from multiple exposures, and to translate that information into health risk. Congress mandated this report to be released by last year and it still isn’t out, an obvious attempt to stall until the next administration is in power, an administration that might be far more industry friendly.

    The fallout “feasibility” study will finally be released for public comment in February. This feasibility study was led by CDC (within its National Center for Enviromental Health), using experts from NCI and past DOE scientists. One question asked by these agencies, of public representatives like me is- why spend more money to provide added doses and health risk to the public? In response I ask, why hasn’t this already been done? We have endured these exposures and the health consequences that often develop from these exposures which, for some, end in death. Why do we not, at a very minimum, have the right to know the full extent of our involuntary exposures, and the health risk accompanying these exposures? I should know- I have lost my entire family to what are believed to be radiation exposure induced cancers and other exposure health effects.

    It is of significance to note that there are those within the scientific community who feel that doses can be added NOW, without a dragged out “feasibility assessment”, and that health risk can be provided NOW. Why do exposed populations deserve any less? Why so much foot dragging by the government, keeping the public from essential information with direct impact upon their lives?

    The reason that it is important to understand the full extent of combined exposures and health risk from multiple fallout exposures, is that people need to know whether they are at significant enough health risk from their exposures that they should be monitored and treated for radiation induced cancers and other debilitating and sometimes life threatening diseases which are plausibly linked to these exposures to I-131 or the other radionuclides released in fallout.

    Some 300 radioactive substances were released from NTS atomic tests, some of which can cause cancers far more frequently lethal than thyroid cancer, which has been linked to I-131 exposure. People, once exposed, remain at lifetime risk for radiation induced cancers and other diseases linked to these exposures. Why hasn’t the public been given this essential, lifesaving information on the other radioactive substances to which we have been exposed from fallout sources?

    ACTION ALERT: Now is truly the time to let the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and your representatives in Congress, know that the American public demands, at the very least, to be informed openly and honestly of the full extent of combined exposures and health risk from these exposures, from combined fallout sources. If we don’t act now, fallout exposures will become a topic which some officials will be very very glad to see “swept under the rug.”

    Please contact your congressional delegations, or send an email, fax, or letter to the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, at wagingpeace@napf.org, and your communication will be forwarded to CDC and the Department of Health and Human Services.

  • Errors Found In Hanford Thyroid Disease Study

    Hanford Study Sees No Harm proclaimed the New York Times headline of January 28, 1999. The headlines in USA TODAY, December 15, 1999 read, Errors Are Found In Radiation Review at Hanford Nuclear Site.

    I started my day on the January 28, 1999 with the phone ringing off the hook with calls from national, Pacific Northwest, and local media asking me what I thought about this purported “No Harm” finding of the Hanford Thyroid Disease Study (HTDS). The HTDS was a nine-year, $18 million epidemiological study to assess the impact of the Hanford Nuclear Reservation offsite emissions of radioiodine (I-131) onto an unsuspecting public from the mid 1940s to the late 1950s. Hanford released approximately 900,000 curies of I-131 between 1944 and 1957, as a byproduct of plutonium production at the facility.

    Since I was one of those exposed to Hanford’s I-131 as a child, when most vulnerable to uptake of the radioactive substance into my thyroid gland, I had followed the emissions study from its inception years ago. But I was not prepared for this unbelievable “no harm” conclusion of the HTDS researchers. The disturbing Hanford Study Sees No Harm headline appeared the New York Times just hours before the scheduled briefing in which I was to participate as a member of the Hanford Health Effects Subcommittee. Somehow, someone had leaked this tidbit from the Congressional briefing on HTDS which had taken place in Washington D.C. on January 27th, a day before the public and press were to know the results of this study.

    As I spoke with NPR, national and local TV stations, and print media reporters — not yet having seen the summary materials on HTDS published by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and its contractor, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (FHCRC) — all I could say to this barrage of media seeking me out was “I am shocked by this conclusion. This does not reflect the reality of what has happened to those of us exposed to Hanford’s radioactive emissions.” I went on to describe the fact that my entire family, exposed to Hanford’s radioiodine and other radionuclides, developed thyroid disease and cancer, and that I am the only member of my family who has survived.

    A Downwinder’s Burden – The Reality

    My father, a nuclear engineer at the Hanford facility during years of I-131 (and other radionuclide) releases, had died of aggressive, metastatic thyroid cancer three years ago. He also had hypothyroidism. My mother, who had developed both hypothyroidism and hyperparathyroidism, was to be diagnosed (just two weeks after this pronouncement by the HTDS research team of no health impact from Hanford’s radioiodine) with malignant melanoma, which killed her in less than six weeks’ time. My older brother had died in 1947, during years of Hanford radiation emissions, within the Hanford downwind area, part of an unexplained surge of neonatal deaths within the Hanford downwind area. Exposed to Hanford’s I-131 as a fetus, infant and child, I also have developed severe hypothyroidism and related health problems. Of note is that there is no history of thyroid disease anywhere in our extended family other than those of us who lived in the shadow of the Hanford nuclear facility during years of I-131 emissions. And we are not alone. An entire family devastated by thyroid disease and cancer. This story is repeated over and over amongst those of us who are Hanford “downwinders.”

    The Struggle To Correct An Erroneous Official Study

    So began the struggle by a small group of determined Hanford-exposed citizens and activists to correct this surreal, unfathomable, purported “no harm” conclusion reached by HTDS researchers. This struggle involved confronting defensive HTDS research team members in public meetings, trying to reverse the harm being done by this “conclusion” which truly did not reflect the reality of the Hanford situation.

    The HTDS summary materials given to the public and the media contained the following statement: “[T]hese results provide rather strong evidence that exposures at these levels to I-131 do not increase the risk of thyroid disease or hyperparathyroidism. These results should consequently provide a substantial degree of reassurance to the population exposed to Hanford radiation that the exposures are not likely to have affected their thyroid or parathyroid health [emphasis added].” In these public meetings, I repeatedly requested the FHCRC HTDS researchers to retract this offensive statement publicly. I asked, ‘How could Hanford-exposed people like me possibly be told we should be reassured when our loved ones were dead of thyroid cancer, and when whole families without history of thyroid disorders had developed thyroid disease?” To me, their “no harm” statement insulted the suffering, the reality of those who had been subjected to involuntary radiation exposures.

    The media, overall, was very supportive of our efforts, perhaps because it was clear to all concerned that something was definitely wrong with this “no harm” conclusion. Particularly, in light of the Chernobyl studies that brought forward facts that children exposed to I-131 from the Chernobyl nuclear disaster had statistically significant incidence of thyroid disease and thyroid cancer. This “no harm” conclusion of HTDS was inconsistent with other studies of radioiodine exposure and thyroid health harm. Something was definitely wrong with this picture.

    And so the analysis began, by citizens and scientists alike, trying to determine how this study could come to such a surreal conclusion. Already, articles and letters to the editor were appearing in regional papers from members of the American Nuclear Society and their allies, portraying these conclusions of HTDS as final, irrefutable evidence that Hanford’s I-131 had caused no harm to those exposed.

    One of the true scientific heroes in this effort is Dr. Owen Hoffman of SENES, Oak Ridge, Inc., Center for Risk Analysis. It was through the efforts of Dr. Hoffman that we were able to begin to understand what had gone wrong, and how to discuss the scientific fallacies of this study publicly. Dr. Hoffman was able to translate complex statistical concepts into understandable terms, thus empowering us to raise these issues of import with the HTDS researchers and the media.

    And, thus empowered by Dr Hoffman and others, my colleague Tim Connor, an investigative journalist and Hanford activist for many decades, and I, armed with a letter of protest co-signed by more than 22 representatives of citizen groups from around the country, went to meet with Dr Dick Jackson, director of the National Center for Environmental Health of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This letter raised serious concerns with regard to a number of scientific issues within HTDS and as to the communication and interpretation of the findings of this study by FHCRC and CDC to the public, Congress, and the media. These concerns included HTDS researchers’ presentation of this study as if it were conclusive proof of no thyroid or parathyroid impact from Hanford’s I-131 releases, that FHCRC exaggerated the statistical power of the study, and that the uncertainties in dose estimates and confounding NTS and global fallout I-131 doses were not specifically addressed for the HTDS cohort. The letter went on to discuss significant problems created by the information “blackout” which kept even those citizens who had been following the study throughout its history, from learning about the results of the preliminary draft of the study until we read about it in the New York Times on the morning of January 28.

    We asked Dr. Jackson to support a precedent-setting extended review by the National Academies of Science (NAS) of HTDS, a review which would address both the scientific and communications aspects of HTDS. Dr. Jackson, to his credit, understood the importance of this review, and granted our request. This is one of the first such extended reviews to be carried out by NAS, initiated by concerned citizens, reviewing not just the typical scientific components and qualities of a study, but concentrating as well upon the way the study’s preliminary findings were communicated to the public, Congress, and the media. The “normal” NAS review of this type comprises only a review of the science.

    The NAS, which is the entity reviewing HTDS, was chartered in l863. The NAS is one of the world’s most prominent scientific organizations. Its purpose is to advise the US Congress and federal agencies on scientific and technical matters. Its Board on Radiation Effects Research has played a leading role over the years in evaluating radiation health studies.

    NAS Review Conclusions

    The NAS committee released the results of its extended review of HTDS this December 12, l999, in a public meeting in Spokane, Washington, followed the next day by a briefing in Washington D.C. The conclusions reached by the NAS validated all of the arguments made by those of us who had “gone public” to contradict the misinformation portrayed by the HTDS research team. The headlines in USA TODAY, December 15, l999 read: “Errors Are Found In Radiation Review at Hanford Nuclear Site. ”

    This is truly a victory for Hanford and all downwinders, for people everywhere exposed to I-131 — from US Department of Energy nuclear weapons facilites such as Hanford, Oak Ridge or the Idaho National Engineering Lab, or from nuclear weapons test sites such as the Nevada Test Site or Semipalatalinsk in Kazakhstan, or from nuclear accidents resulting in exposure due to global fallout. No longer can the HTDS be portrayed by US pro-nuclear factions and their allies as conclusive proof that I-131 does not cause thyroid cancer, thyroid disease and parathyroid disease.

    The NAS committee concluded the following:

    1. While the study itself was well designed, the study researchers reported the study’s findings as more conclusive than they really were purported to be.

    The committee found that “shortcomings in the analytical and statistical methods used by the study’s investigators overestimated the ability to detect radiation effects, which means the study results are less definitive than had been reported.” [NAS review report, 12/14/99, at page l] The failure by HTDS researchers to find a statistically significant relationship between increasing dose and frequency of thyroid disease was interpreted by the authors of HTDS as evidence of no effect (that is, that the negative findings were conclusive). Because there could be a true underlying effect that couldn’t be detected by this study, the results of the study were, at best inconclusive, rather than conclusive of no health impact from Hanford’s I-131 exposures, as portrayed by HTDS’ authors.

    There are several important reasons why HTDS may have not picked up this underlying effect, and these are discussed within the other findings of the NAS review, discussed below.

    2. Unlike conventional epidemiological studies, the HTDS researchers released their findings without sufficiently explaining the uncertainties involved in reconstructing radiation exposures from decades ago.

    While the NAS committee emphasized that the HTDS appears to have been well designed, the weakest link is the dosimetry (which is the method of estimating individual exposure and radiation dose). The dose estimates which were assigned to members of the group (cohort) of exposed people studied were recreated using mathematical models involving input from study participants (and their mothers, if available) with regard to their recollections of approximately how much milk study participants drank some 50+ years ago. The milk pathway is one of the primary means by which radioiodine is ingested, and is a particular concern with infants and children. The radioiodine deposits on pasture grass, the cows or goats eat the contaminated grass, and then, the radioiodine is ingested by humans as the milk is consumed. Children uptake far more radioiodine than adults in this manner, because they often consume a greater quantity of milk than adults, because their thyroids are smaller and more vulnerable than those of adults, and because of a faster metabolism than that of adults.

    Therefore, the estimated doses which were being correlated to incidence of thyroid and parathyroid disease within the HTDS study group were reconstructed from memories of milk intake years ago, and then based upon mathematical modeling of wind patterns, fallout of the radioiodine from rain, and deposition of radioiodine. These estimated Hanford doses were further confounded by the additional exposures of people within the HTDS cohort to Nevada Test Site radioiodine (from atomic bomb tests in the l950s and l960s) which was often a very substantial contributor to dose, and by fallout from global sources and the Marshall Islands Test of l954 (Test Bravo) in which fallout travelled west to east, depositing upon the Hanford exposure area as well. These confounding doses were not given detailed consideration by HTDS. An example of just how such an issue should be addressed is shown by the exemplary study performed by SENES Oak Ridge, Inc. Center for Risk Analysis, which was the first of its kind to estimate the cumulative I-131 dose received from Oak Ridge and Nevada Test Site I-131 exposures, within “uncertainty ranges” (that is, within a range of possible doses one may have received once age, diet and location are taken into account), and providing exposed populations with their estimated risk of health outcomes from these exposures. The HTDS did not deal in this way with specificity with these confounding exposures received by member of the HTDS study group.

    The amount of I-131 Hanford released after mid-l951 also were more than likely underestimated, raising the total curies released from about 750,000 to more than 900,000. Revision of the amount released would have a significant effect on the dose estimates for those who were considered within HTDS to have received low doses as compared to the higher peak releases of l945-46.

    3. The NAS committee found that the statistical power of the HTDS was not as high as claimed by the HTDS researchers.

    The NAS committee found that the statistical power calculations made by the HTDS researchers made inadequate allowance for imprecision in the dose estimates. Due to this factor, the committee concluded that HTDS did not have as much statistical power to detect radiation effects as the investigators claimed.

    4. The committee found that in media and public briefings on HTDS, the investigators failed to pay sufficient attention to the health concerns of the audience, and that HTDS investigators and CDC officials should have offered more balanced, and possibly alternative, interpretations of the findings and discussed their implications for individuals.

    This last conclusion of the NAS committee is so well reflected in the actions of one Hanford-exposed person in attendance at the public briefing held in the Hanford area, on the evening of January 28, l999. Throughout the entire several-hour briefing, this woman held up a hand painted sign, reading “I DONT BELIEVE YOU.”

    Victory Comes After Tireless Efforts

    The battle to expose the truth of the Hanford situation began on the morning of January 28, l999, and ended in the afternoon of December 12, l999, with the public briefing on the results of the NAS review of HTDS. The battle ended with the headline in USA TODAY, December 15, l999, Errors Are Found In Radiation Review at Hanford Nuclear Site. The tireless efforts of a small group of activists succeeded and the HTDS study can no longer be portrayed as conclusive proof of no health impact from Hanford I-131.

    The HTDS study may actually turn out, upon follow-up, to be looked upon as a study portraying a slightly positive association between exposure and health. The purported “no impact” message had been echoed by conservative forces to rebut exposed communities concerns. Uncorrected, this “no impact” message was beginning to be used to nullify the public’s concerns about Nevada Test Site radioiodine exposures, exposures of radioiodine from local sites such as the Idaho National Engineering Lab (INEEL), in Oak Ridge, and exposures at other sites where I-131 was emitted as a byproduct nuclear weapons production.

    This is a truly welcomed victory for everyone. It is an especially important victory for “downwinders” including all who have been exposed anywhere in the US from the Nevada Test Site to the Department of Energy nuclear weapons research and production facilities. Downwinders face hurdles trying to get even the most minimal medical screening or medical care; even to get relief through the justice system; and all the while we bury our loved ones and hope that we are not, indeed, the sacrificial minority we have sometimes been deemed.

  • National Cancer Institute’s Management of Radiation Studies: A Congressional Investigation

    The role of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in the study assessing the public health impacts of exposure of the American people to fallout from atomic bomb tests detonated at the Nevada Test Site in the l950s was the focus of a recent congressional investigation.This investigation also assessed the NCI’s role in management of three studies of Chernobyl exposed populations. The congressional investigation found:

    I. Researchers at the NCI substantially delayed the release of the Nevada Test Site fallout report, despite data that showed that significant numbers of children across the nation received doses of radiation that were much higher and posed greater health risks than previously believed.2

    II. The NCI neither involved the public in its Nevada Test Site bomb test fallout study nor adequately responded to governmental requests for information developed through the study.3

    III. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the NCI management performed little oversight or tracking of the project. As a result, they failed to ensure that the report was completed in a timely fashion and that important issues were addressed in an open manner.4

    IV. The NCI Nevada Test Site fallout report does not meaningfully inform the American public of the impacts of the radioactive fallout from the weapons testing program.5

    V. The management failures of the I-131 study have been repeated in a NCI-led international effort to study the effects of radioiodine releases on thyroid cancer in the areas surrounding the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. 6

    [As a result of these and other factors, it is uncertain whether the Chernobyl studies will be able to locate and screen those intended to participate, depriving these people the benefits of medical screening and the study, of its subjects so essential to meaningful results from these studies on the causal link between I-131 exposure and thyroid disease and cancer- Ed.].

    Conclusion:
    This congressional investigation on the NCI’s role in management of both the NTS fallout study and the three Chernobyl exposure studies raise some serious concerns with regard to openness and management by the NCI. These studies have been jeopardized by mismanagement within NCI.

    Personal Observations:
    As a person significantly exposed to environmental radiation emissions from the both NTS fallout and a Department of Energy nuclear weapons facility during the l950s, I applaud this comprehensive congressional investigation into the past management by NCI of radiation exposure studies.

    It is my sincere hope that this excellent and comprehensive analysis will result in significant restructuring of management within NCI within these contexts, and adherence to a consistent policy of openness and public involvement on the part of all federal agencies involved in assessment of public health impacts of environmental radiation exposure.