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Health effects Chernobyl area

Epidemiological studies of populations in the FSU exposed to fallout from the 1986 nuclear reactor explosion at Chernobyl and releases from the Chelyabinsk-65 complex demonstrate the health effects associated with exposure to radioactive iodine, strontium, and caesium. A study of 2.81 X 10" individuals exposed along the Techa River, downstream from Chelyabinsk-65, revealed that a statistically significant increase in leukemia mortality arose between 5 yr and 20 yr after the initial exposure (37 observed deaths versus 14-23 expected deaths see Cochran et al. (1993) and cited references and comments). There has been a significant increase of thyroid cancers among children in the areas contaminated by fallout from the Chernobyl explosion (Harley, 2001 UNSCEAR, 2000). The initial external exposures from Chernobyl were due to and short-lived isotopes. Subsequently, external exposures to Cs and nd internal... [Pg.4756]

However, this incident was dwarfed in scale by the meltdown that took place at the Chernobyl reactor in the former Soviet Union or modern-day Ukraine in 1986. Setting Windscale at 1 on an 1 release scale, Chernobyl comes in at 2300 (Williams, 2006), and within a few years reports were made of a marked increase in cases of thyroid cancer in neighboring areas, such as modern-day Belarus (Kazakov et al, 1992). Studies of the aftermath of the incident continue today, although much uncertainty remains as to the long-term environmental and health effects (Baverstock and Williams, 2006). [Pg.44]

Two accidents of vastly differing severity have occurred at nuclear power plants. On 28 March 1979, an accident occurred in the nuclear power plant at Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania, USA. The radiation was contained and the small amount released had negligible effects on the health of individuals at the plant. On 26 April 1986 an accident occurred in the nuclear power plant 10 miles from the city of Chernobyl, then part of the Soviet Union. The chain reaction in the radioactive core of one of the four reactors became uncontrolled. Steam pressure rose to dangerous levels there were several explosions and a subsequent fire took several hours to extinguish. Large amounts of radioactive material were scattered over a wide area and into the atmosphere (later descending in a dilute form in rain all over the world). [Pg.501]


See other pages where Health effects Chernobyl area is mentioned: [Pg.1185]    [Pg.124]   
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