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Thyroid damage to US West Coast children, from Fukushima radiation

Decades after the accident, a 2011 study by the National Institutes of Health found that higher absorption of I-131 radiation led to an increased risk for thyroid cancer among victims of Chernobyl radiation – a risk that has not diminished over time.

The children who were unfortunate enough to be exposed to Fukushima radiation on the US West Coast, as well as in Alaska and Hawaii could now face similar risks.

wind-trajectories-from-FukuFukushima fallout – thyroid damage in US children http://www.nyrnaturalnews.com/cancer-2/2013/04/fukushima-fallout-thyroid-damage-in-us-children By Staff Writer Natural News  — If you are still living with the belief that disasters that happen in another country happen ‘somewhere else’,  here’s a stark reminder
that there is no ‘somewhere else’ on our planet.

Researchers working with the Radiation and Public Health Project (RPHP) in New York have discovered that the Fukushima nuclear disaster has had far-reaching health effects showing that young children born on the US West Coast are 28% more likely to develop congenital hypothyroidism.

RPHP is a non-profit educational and scientific organisation, established by scientists and physicians dedicated to understanding the relationships between low-level, nuclear radiation and public health.

In examining post-Fukushima conditions along the West Coast, the researchers found American-born children were developing similar conditions to those found in Europeans after the 1986 meltdown of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant.

US children born after the 2011 meltdown of Japan’s Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant are at high risk of acquiring congenital hypothyroidism say the researchers.

“Fukushima fallout appeared to affect all areas of the US, and was especially large in some, mostly in the western part of the nation,” wrote the researchers in their study in the Open Journal of Pediatrics.

Nuclear fallout doesn’t respect national borders

The researchers made their discovery by looking specifically at levels of radioiodine isotopes (I-131).

Just a few days after the meltdown, I-131 concentration levels in California, Hawaii, Alaska, Oregon and Washington were up to 211 times above the normal level, they say.

This is the way the wind blows; fallout from Fukushima quickly reached the West coast of the US

At the same time, the number of congenital hypothyroid cases began to skyrocket, increasing by an average of 16% from March 17 to Dec. 31, 2011.

Between March 17 and June 30, shortly after the meltdown, newly born children experienced a 28% greater risk of acquiring hypothyroidism.

In 36 other US states outside of the exposure zone, the risk of congenital hypothyroidism decreased by 3% – a finding that researchers believe may serve as further proof that Fukushima had something to do with the unusually high results found on the West Coast.

The disease is usually rare, but can manifest into a serious condition if left untreated. Affected fetuses and children may suffer serious developmental delay – and a recent study found that 44.2% of a sample of 94,975 Fukushima children have had thyroid ultrasound abnormalities as a likely result of their exposure to the radiation.

 

West coast in the firing line

Japanese officials (and, to be fair, officials and nuclear apologists elsewhere) have always downplayed the Fukushima meltdown and its potential to cause health havoc outside the meltdown area. Even so very soon after the meltdown radiation was being detected in Tokyo far beyond the evacuation zone.

In measurements made just after the meltdown and posted online, scientists from the University of California at Berkley detailed alarmingly high levels of radioactive isotopes in soil samples from across the state of California.

Even as far away as Boston, US scientists were detecting I-131 in samples of rainwater soon after the disaster.

Just like Chernobyl

Radioactive iodine that enters the human body typically gathers in the thyroid, which releases growth hormones. Radiation exposure can, therefore, stunt the growth of a child’s body and brain. Exposure can have lifelong effects, as scientists studying the Chernobyl nuclear power plant meltdown in 19896 have found.

Decades after the accident, a 2011 study by the National Institutes of Health found that higher absorption of I-131 radiation led to an increased risk for thyroid cancer among victims of Chernobyl radiation – a risk that has not diminished over time.

The children who were unfortunate enough to be exposed to Fukushima radiation on the US West Coast, as well as in Alaska and Hawaii could now face similar risks.

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April 6, 2013 - Posted by | health, radiation, USA

8 Comments »

  1. If there was Iodine, is it not likely that at least some of it was Cesium Iodide?

    Comment by TechDud | April 6, 2013 | Reply

    • No We are not here talking about* compounds*, such as caesium iodide, but of *isotopes of the element caesium*.

      To detect iodine 131 I think that epidemiologists would need to fist detect gamma radiation. There would be no ionising radiation from the compound caesium iodide,( used in photocathodes in fluoroscopy)

      Comment by Christina MacPherson | April 6, 2013 | Reply

  2. Right after disaster I posted several short audio recording in which I described possible dangers of low dose exposure to radioactive substance I-131 and ordered to stop giving milk to infants until August. I also recommended for children staying indoors during and 1 hour after rain until late May. Nobody took my warning seriously, especially after listening to mass media propaganda. Unfortunately it looks now like I am right.
    I have long-term professional exposure to radioactive isotopes and know what I am talking about.

    Comment by Professor Warshawsky, MAPS | April 6, 2013 | Reply

  3. Thank you for your response.

    Respectfully, akin to their naturally occurring stable elements, isotopes make compounds too.
    I find it difficult to believe that free-radicals could travel far in their entirety without at least some of it forming compounds. Iodine is a halogen, after all; even it’s isotopes.

    [off-topic]
    Note from side panel: “FACT: there was exactly zero background radioactive cesium or iodine before above-ground nuclear testing and nuclear accidents started”

    Read Joshua’s account of Israel’s early reconnaissance of the Promised Land concerning the size of fruits and vegetables, and separately that of Sodom & Gomorrah’s destruction. Perhaps some “facts” may need be revisited. Would it not be intriguing to study long-lived isotopes in those regions? Obviously, no Cesium or Iodine should be found, as those are relatively short-lived isotopes.
    Also, what of the “natural” reactions that occurred in Sudan, iirc.
    [/off-topic]

    Thank you for the information concerning the Fukushima nuclear Mega-Disaster concerning the actual human harm from this “nuke-puke”.
    If one was to compare all of it to bananas, would we all not have been buried in bananas long ago?

    May the truth help set us free.

    Comment by TechDud | April 8, 2013 | Reply

  4. […] Thyroid damage to US West Coast children, from Fukushima radiation (nuclear-news.net) […]

    Pingback by Radiation levels continue to increase in lakes, rivers north of Tokyo. Deadly levels of radiation found in food 225 miles from Fukushima. Media reports nothing. | Family Survival Protocol | April 8, 2013 | Reply

  5. […] Thyroid damage to US West Coast children, from Fukushima radiation (nuclear-news.net) […]

    Pingback by Lawsuit Seeks Evacuation of Fukushima Children | Impressions | April 14, 2013 | Reply

  6. DECADES AFTER?

    Comment by Betty Basche | October 29, 2013 | Reply

    • If you read on – you will quickly see that the quotation here refers not to the Fukushima nuclear accident, but to the Chernobyl one

      Comment by Christina MacPherson | October 29, 2013 | Reply


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