Radiation in Japan: What's the cancer risk?
Following the terrible human disaster in Japan, newspapers and broadcast media have been covering the issue of radiation and the possibility of it causing cancer.
Cancer Council Australia's CEO, Professor Ian Olver, has examined the issue below.
Our thoughts are with the people in Japan, some of whom now face the prospect of an increase in radiation exposure as well as the tragic losses caused by the earthquake and tsunami.
Media reports about the levels of exposure and potential danger are conflicting, ranging from claims that there is little to worry about to dire predictions of mass radiation poisoning and increases in cancer diagnoses.
Let's put the issue of potential radiation exposure in perspective. Much of the media coverage includes references to a measure of radiation called 'millisieverts', but with little clarification of what it means.
Millisieverts is a measure of the effect of radiation on the body. All Australians are exposed to radiation on a daily basis. For example, background radiation in the atmosphere in Australia is 1.5 millisieverts each year, which is of no consequence to an individual's health.
However, if the dose of radiation is high enough, the short-term effects are radiation sickness, and the longer term effects, years later, can include cancer. The impact on health depends on the dose and the duration of exposure.
So, how much is too much? Here are some measures that help put the Japanese situation into context:
- Exposure from a mammogram is 3 millisieverts;
- Radiation workers are allowed exposures of up to 20 millisieverts per year;
- At 100 millisieverts exposure, there will be one additional cancer detected years later for each 100 people exposed.
According to media reports, Japanese authorities said radiation levels at the plant reached a peak of 400 millisieverts per hour (15 March). However, this was at a single location and a certain point in time. Later readings suggested radiation was at 11.9 millisieverts per hour, followed six hours later by 0.6 millisieverts.
While Cancer Council will keep abreast of developments, at this stage and subject to any further escalation, it would appear the risk of increased cancers due to the radiation leaks in Japan is minimal.
(Source: Australian Cancer Council)
More information
![]() | For more information on cancer, including breast, prostate, kidney and stomach cancer, see Cancer: Overview. |
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Comment from: LewyLewis | 5/9/2011 10:44:08 AM
Wake Up World
Comment from: tess | 5/16/2011 8:16:39 AM
Again, another article that fails to disclose the real danger of radiation at this stage of the on-going disaster. That is the hazards caused by "internal radiation" - the term applied to virtually unmeasurable particles being inhaled or ingested by biological beings such as humans! This type of radioactive danger has absolutely nothing to do with monograms or chest x-rays which are forms of external radiation using directly measurable forms of radiation: X-ray, Gamma, and strong Beta radiation. Weak beta and alpha radiation in the form of floating particles (dust specs) which are NOT measurable by geiger-counters in a traditional sense can settle in the human body and remain there for years causing literally hundreds of different kinds of ailments. Plutonium for example is said to be the most dangerous by experts yet it emits only weak alpha particles which if remain "external" can be defended against by a single sheet of paper. Why? Because such radiation spreads from particle to particle similar in concept to the way that a magnet can be used on metal to make it also magnetic. Such particles once inhaled or ingested will likely be the death of a person - but typically not before several expensive medical procedures deplete the family funds. In Chernobyl only a hundred or so people died from external radiation yet it's estimated that approximately 1,000,000 people have died from internal radiation. And people are still being affected by it even today. Please, before you write another article on this topic research just a little bit!!! Thank you, Tess