Saturday, September 30, 2023
Kiratas
  • Home
  • World
  • Lifestyle

    Trending Tags

    • Pandemic
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Lifestyle

    Trending Tags

    • Pandemic
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Kiratas
No Result
View All Result
Home Science

A study with 300,000 workers in the nuclear industry suggests an increased risk of death from cancer

Eliza Houghton by Eliza Houghton
August 16, 2023
in Science
0
A study with 300,000 workers in the nuclear industry suggests an increased risk of death from cancer
0
SHARES
2
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Two engineers inspect generator machinery at a nuclear power plant during an outage.Two engineers inspect generator machinery at a nuclear power plant during an outage.Monty Rakusen (Getty Images)

Prolonged exposure to low doses of ionizing radiation is associated with a higher risk of death from cancer than previously thought, according to a study of nearly 310,000 nuclear industry workers in France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The mortality rate from solid tumors increases by 52% at 10 years for each accumulated gray, a unit of absorbed radiation that is equivalent to about 10,000 chest X-rays. The individual risk, however, remains very low.

Epidemiologist Amy Berrington, who was not involved in the research, gives an example, using another common unit of absorbed dose. “For every 1,000 people exposed to 100 millisieverts of ionizing radiation—most nuclear workers are exposed to less than 10 millisieverts—there could be an extra 10 deaths, instead of five, on top of the more than 200 expected deaths from tumors produced by other causes”, Berrington explained to the Science Media Center portal. “Twice a small risk is still a small risk,” stressed the epidemiologist, from the Institute for Cancer Research, in London.

The new study includes data from workers in the nuclear industry between 1944 and 2016. The authors have analyzed almost 104,000 deaths, more than 28,000 of them caused by solid tumors, which include the most common types of cancer, except leukemia. The mortality rate from these tumors increases by 52% for each accumulated gray, but doubles if the analysis is restricted to workers receiving lower doses of less than 100 milligrays. The signatories —headed by the epidemiologist Mary Schubauer-Beriganof the International Agency for Research on Cancer— trust that their results will help improve radiation protection measures in sectors such as the nuclear industry, scientific research and medicine.

The risk of cancer from a given dose of radiation has historically been deduced from the survivors of the atomic bombs dropped by the United States on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, at the end of World War II. These people, however, received most of the radiation in a second, according to Jim Smith, an expert in radioactivity at the University of Portsmouth in the United Kingdom. “It has long been assumed that chronic exposures to low doses of radiation, with the same amount absorbed, are between 1.5 and 2 times less harmful than acute exposures, such as those of atomic bomb survivors,” he has reported Smith to the Science Media Center. “The results of this important study support the evidence accumulated over the past few decades that long-term chronic doses are actually likely to be as detrimental as acute doses, in terms of cancer risk per amount of radiation absorbed by the body. organism,” says Smith.

All citizens are exposed to ionizing radiation, but its origin is mainly natural. The average dose in the Spanish population is 3.7 millisieverts per year, of which 2.4 (64%) come from natural radiation, according to data from the Nuclear Safety Council. Cosmic rays cause an average dose of 0.39 millisieverts, a figure that increases in frequent travelers on transoceanic flights. Radon gas, coming from the uranium present in the subsoil, generates an average dose of 1.15 millisieverts. And X-ray diagnostic techniques reach an average dose of 1.2 millisieverts. Living near a nuclear power plant is barely 0.005 millisierverts, according to the United Nations Scientific Committee for the Study of the Effects of Atomic Radiation.

The new study is published this Thursday in the specialized magazine The BMJ. Among the signatories is the epidemiologist Isabelle Thierry Chef, head of the Medical Radiation group at the Barcelona Institute for Global Health. The team already published similar work in 2015. Their results suggested a 48% increase in the estimated death rate from cancer, excluding leukemia, for each gray. The authors then calculated that about 200 of the 19,000 solid tumor deaths observed were associated with excess exposure to artificial radiation.

The work published this Thursday by the team led by Mary Schubauer-Berigan once again dismantles the idea that high and punctual doses of radiation, such as those suffered by the survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, are more harmful than low and prolonged doses. “Our study has found no evidence of a lower risk of solid tumors, per unit dose, among workers routinely exposed to low doses of radiation,” the authors note.

You can follow MATERIA on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, or sign up here to receive our weekly newsletter.


#study #workers #nuclear #industry #suggests #increased #risk #death #cancer

Tags: cancerDeathincreasedindustrynuclearriskstudysuggestsworkers
Previous Post

Government and Junts approach positions, but the Table of Congress is still in the air

Next Post

Sánchez sends a written proposal to Puigdemont after Díaz’s direct mediation with Waterloo

Eliza Houghton

Eliza Houghton

Related Posts

Sara García, astronaut candidate and oncologist: “We still surpass the machines”
Science

Sara García, astronaut candidate and oncologist: “We still surpass the machines”

by Eliza Houghton
September 30, 2023
Gamow’s elevator
Science

Gamow’s elevator

by Eliza Houghton
September 29, 2023
Donna Strickland, Nobel Prize in Physics: “It is difficult to see the thread that goes from Einstein’s equations to GPS”
Science

Donna Strickland, Nobel Prize in Physics: “It is difficult to see the thread that goes from Einstein’s equations to GPS”

by Eliza Houghton
September 29, 2023
Can birds attack humans like in Hitchcock’s film?
Science

Can birds attack humans like in Hitchcock’s film?

by Eliza Houghton
September 28, 2023
‘Garumbatitan’, a new species of giant dinosaur, emerges from the underground of Morella, in Castellón
Science

‘Garumbatitan’, a new species of giant dinosaur, emerges from the underground of Morella, in Castellón

by Eliza Houghton
September 27, 2023
Next Post
Sánchez sends a written proposal to Puigdemont after Díaz’s direct mediation with Waterloo

Sánchez sends a written proposal to Puigdemont after Díaz's direct mediation with Waterloo

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Premium Content

Switzerland: Military police data exposed on the dark web

Switzerland: Military police data exposed on the dark web

August 27, 2023
Fukushima dump: Anonymous attacks Japan nuclear agency’s website

Fukushima dump: Anonymous attacks Japan nuclear agency’s website

August 18, 2023
Conference on IIoT and IoT: Submit your presentation on building IoT 2024 now

Conference on IIoT and IoT: Submit your presentation on building IoT 2024 now

September 9, 2023

Browse by Category

  • Science
  • Sports
  • World

Browse by Tags

Amazon Apple Artificial Intelligence attack attacks China Court data Death due Feijóo Germany Google government investiture iOS iPhone law live Madrid man Microsoft million news people police President Pro Rubiales Russia Russia-Ukraine invasion Security Software development Spain Sánchez time Today Ukraine Updates video Vulnerabilities war workshop world years
Kiratas

Latest News from World, Health, Politics, Sports, Business, Education, Technology, Arts and Latin America, the Middle East, South Asia.

Categories

  • Science
  • Sports
  • World

Browse by Tag

Amazon Apple Artificial Intelligence attack attacks China Court data Death due Feijóo Germany Google government investiture iOS iPhone law live Madrid man Microsoft million news people police President Pro Rubiales Russia Russia-Ukraine invasion Security Software development Spain Sánchez time Today Ukraine Updates video Vulnerabilities war workshop world years

Recent Posts

  • One kilo of glass and real colors – the photo news of the week 38/2023
  • The best headphones for streaming
  • Sleeping in Shrek’s swamp is now possible: we tell you how to book and how much it costs
  • About Us
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

© Aroged 2023. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Contact Us

© Aroged 2023. All Rights Reserved.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.