UN approves radiation advice – Denies effects from Fukushima nuclear disaster
check the links and qoutes below the article for the debunking of this report
Japan Officials Failed to Hand Out Radiation Pills in Quake’s Aftermath
Over 100 Japan nuclear workers at risk of thyroid cancer
The reality of Ultrasonic Thyroid Examinations
WHO Report on Fukushima a Travesty
The UN Rapporteur calls for the Japanese government to take responsibility, concerning particularly with the effects of radiation
h/t sue from enenews
Last year, Japanese authorities protected children in Fukushima prefecture from iodine-131 by evacuating them before radiation was released, issuing stable iodine pills to block iodine-131, and preventing food and water containing the radioactive isotope from being consumed.
Researched and written
by World Nuclear News
10 December 2012
“..The United Nations is to adopt advice on radiation that clarifies what can be said about its health effects on individuals and large populations. A preliminary report has also found no observable health effects from last year’s nuclear accident in Fukushima…”
The studies come from the UN Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) after five years of work. An independent body of international experts, UNSCEAR has met regularly since 1955 and helped establish radiation as the best understood carcinogen in the world through its studies of atomic bomb survivors and the effects of the Chernobyl accident.
Having been officially approved by the UN General Assembly, the reports – as well as a resolution welcoming them – will be endorsed in coming weeks. They will then serve to inform all countries of the world when setting their own national radiation safety policies.
Presenting to the UN General Assembly, UNSCEAR’s chair Wolfgang Weiss said that preliminary findings were that no radiation health effects had been observed in Japan among the public, workers or children in the area of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. This is in line with studies already published by the World Health Organisation and Tokyo University that showed people near the damaged power plant received such low doses of radiation that no discernible health effect could be expected.
Low dose
Uncertainties at low doses are such that UNSCEAR ‘does not recommend multiplying low doses by large numbers of individuals to estimate numbers of radiation-induced health effects within a population exposed to incremental doses at levels equivalent to or below natural background levels.’
Six workers received total doses of over 250 mSv during their time tackling the emergency, while 170 received doses over 100 mSv. None of these have shown ill effects, said UNSCEAR, stating that radiation played no role in the coincidental deaths of six Fukushima workers in the time since the accident.
Defining radiation risk
UNSCEAR said that it was not possible to attribute increases in health effects across populations to long term exposure at radiation levels typical of the global average background levels (about 2-20 mSv per year). ‘This is because of the uncertainties associated with the assessment of risks at low doses, the current absence of radiation specific biomarkers for health effects and the insufficient statistical power of epidemiological studies.’
For exposures below 100 mSv UNSCEAR said that a health issue across a population could be put down to radiation exposue on two conditions: that spontaneous occurrence of that issue was low while the radiosensitivity of that issue were very high; and that the number of cases was high enough to overcome ‘the inherent statistical uncertainties’.
An example that could fit the definition is the well-known risk of thyroid cancer from accidental releases of iodine-131. The substance is a short-lived isotope produced in operating nuclear reactors and, if released in sufficient quantities during an accident, could be absorbed in the thyroid glands of children and young people and lead to thyroid cancer. This was only major radiation-related health effect of the Chernobyl accident on the public.
UNSCEAR’s work plan
Next year:
• Complete the assessment of levels of exposure and radiation risks attributable to the Fukushima accident
• A report on the effects of radiation exposure on children
Topics for 2014:
• Radiation exposure from electricity generation
• Biological effects of selected internal emitters
• Revsed methodology for assessing discharges
• Epidemiology of low-dose radiation risks
Last year, Japanese authorities protected children in Fukushima prefecture from iodine-131 by evacuating them before radiation was released, issuing stable iodine pills to block iodine-131, and preventing food and water containing the radioactive isotope from being consumed. As a result, the largest dose thought to have been received by a Japanese child is 35 mSv – this figure also coming from UNSCEAR’s preliminary report. This is ‘reassuring’ in comparison to the doses received by children after the Chernobyl accident, said UNSCEAR while, “That good news must be underlined,” said Argentinian delegate to UNSCEAR, Gerardo Diaz Bertolome.
The statistical chance of health effects increases through the range of 100-1000 mSv exposures, ‘but there are statistical limits in calculating that risk and the population in question had to be big enough to do so.’ The only radiation events on this scale, where populations of thousands have received on the order of 100 mSv, have been the atomic bomb blasts in Japan from World War II.
In general, the effects of radiation only start to become clear at ‘high acute absorbed doses… such as might occur following exposures in accidents or radiotherapy’, for example a dose of over 1000 mSv. Even then it is necessary to eliminate other potential causes before radiation can be unequivocably said to be the cause, said UNSCEAR.
http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/RS_UN_approves_radiation_advice_1012121.html
Japan Officials Failed to Hand Out Radiation Pills in Quake’s Aftermath
September 29, 2011
Wall Street Journal
BY YUKA HAYASHI
TOKYO—Government officials failed to distribute to thousands of people pills that could have minimized radiation risks from the March nuclear accident, governmentdocuments show.
The disclosure is the latest evidence of government neglect of emergency procedures in the chaotic days after the disaster, in which an earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
The Fukushima area and some municipalities surrounding the stricken plant had ample stocks of potassium iodide, like most local communities near nuclear reactors around the world. That is a relatively safe compound that can prevent thyroid cancer, the most common serious outcome of a major …
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204010604576596321581004368.html
[43% of fukushima children have thyroid nodules, normal are 0.5-1%.
There are at least two reference studies. One from 2001 in Nagasaki and another from recent years in the US. Both provide a reference and show the rates at Fukushima are completely outside the normal ranges.]
https://nuclear-news.net/2012/12/10/un-health-survey-of-fukushima-discredited/
Over 100 Japan nuclear workers at risk of thyroid cancer
Dozens of workers at the Fukushima nuclear plant have been found to have received high doses of radiation to their thyroid glands, according to data submitted to the World Health Organization.
Tests for 522 workers found doses greater than 100 millisieverts on the thyroid glands of 178 individuals doing recovery work at the crippled plant. Those workers are at risk of thyroid cancer, the report from Tokyo Electric Power Co. revealed.
The highest recorded dose was 11,800 millisieverts, found in the thyroid gland of an individual aged between 30 to 39 years old, while two other workers had an exposure of more than 10,000 millisieverts to their thyroid glands, Tepco said. The levels are considered to be a lethal dose when received as full-body exposure but that dose on thyroid glands can have limited impact on that organ, the WHO said.
The individual whose thyroid gland received 11,800 millisieverts had a whole-body radiation dose of 678.8 millisieverts. He had not developed symptoms of ill-health and remains employed in a non-nuclear job, the report said.
Reports on radiation doses found on workers remain shrouded, with Tepco refusing to release data directly to individuals involved, Asahi Shimbun reports.
The company said it was monitoring whole-body radiation doses instead because there are no dose limits for thyroid gland data. Tepco also said it plans to offer free thyroid gland ultrasound tests to workers with 50 millisieverts or higher whole-body radiation doses.
http://www.asiadailywire.com/2012/12/over-100-nuclear-workers-at-risk-of-thyroid-cancer/
The reality of Ultrasonic Thyroid Examinations
Fukushima · Children · 21-30November2012
Since December 2011, Fukushima Prefecture has conducted ultrasonic thyroid examinations among children under the age of 18. However, those who were subjected to the examinations are only given the results marked by the letters A to D, and even if the results indicate discovery of pustules or nodules, there are no explanations about the details of the echo results, nor about the size of the nodules, unless the individual submits a request that those findings be disclosed. In response to this demeaning procedure, Fukushima citizens have demanded that each person undertaking the examination should be provided with a copy of the ultrasound image immediately after the examination is complete.
These citizens are not only concerned with thyroid cancer, but other illnesses such as heart disease, stroke, neuropathy, weakened immune system and genetic effects. The group have asked the prefecture to conduct blood examinations in addition to the ultrasonic tests.
So far, some 80,000 children living in the evacuation zone and in Fukushima city have undergone the examination. However, there are cases where the examinations of children from certain regions with high iodine contamination will be delayed, after other areas and towns have been examined. In Iwaki city, for example, although a huge amount of iodine fell on the ground immediately after the nuclear explosion, the tests will not take place until 2013. Due to this delay, many families there have voluntarily had similar tests carried out at hospitals outside Fukushima……..
WHO Report on Fukushima a Travesty
Switzerland · 11-20December2012
The World Health Organisation has failed in its obligation to protect the public and guilty of the crime of non-assistance
World Health Organisation subservient to nuclear lobby
The World Health Report (May 2012) entitled “Preliminary dose estimation from the nuclear accident after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami” [1] is a public relations exercise to reassure the world that WHO is fulfilling its role in the area of radiation and health. Following the preliminary dose estimation, WHO will complete a health risk assessment to “support the identification of needs and priorities for public health action.” But this report and the one to follow cannot help those people in Japan who should have been evacuated much sooner and who will certainly suffer health consequences of varying degrees from their exposure to radiation since March 2011.
This report bears all the hallmarks of WHO’s subservience to the IAEA. It was not written by WHO personnel but by an International Expert Panel convened by the WHO. A cursory glance at the list of contributors shows that all have ties to the nuclear industry, whether directly, as members of the IAEA or UNSCEAR, or as members of organisations like the UK Health Protection Agency (previously the National Radiological Protection Board). WHO has no department or expert in radiation and health [2]. It is entirely dependent on the IAEA for its information on the subject after signing the 1959 agreement WHA 12/40 between the two organisations [3].
Unreliable or absent data……..
http://www.save-children-from-radiation.org/2012/12/11/who-report-on-fukushima-a-travesty/
The UN Rapporteur calls for the Japanese government to take responsibility, concerning particularly with the effects of radiation
Fukushima · 21-30 November2012
Mr. Grover noted that that government’s 20 microsievert per year threshold for designating areas for evacuation is inconsistent with Japanese industrial regulations, the standard for obligatory evacuation used in Chernobyl (5 microsieverts per year), and a significant number of epidemiological studies, which have found increased risks for cancer and other diseases at exposures less than 100 microsieverts per year. He urged that the government should broaden the scope of efforts to monitor and treat radiation health effects, including in populations outside Fukushima prefecture. Parents of children whose thyroids were tested should have access to test results on-demand rather than only after onerous applicationprocedures, and they should have opportunities to seek second opinions or retests. The large numbers of workers who have been employed at the Fukushima Daiichi accident site, often under a layer of sub-contractors, need to be systematically monitored and treated, unlike the situation at present, he said….
I will leave issues concerning food for another future article.. seems like the UN has missed the major points here.. imo
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