Title: Risk of low-level radiation
1Risk of low-level radiation
30 years living with Chernobyl its long term
impact Dr. Angelika Claussen, IPPNW Europe
2The long term impact of Chernobyl
- The burning reactor
Source Tschernobyl Interinform
- The exploded Reactor
- Foto taken by Igor Kostin 12 hours after the
explosion
3The long term impact of Chernobyl
- - The largest nuclear
- catastrophe in the 20th century
- - Radioactivity release 200 times that from
Hiroshima und Nagasaki (WHO/IPHECA 1995) - - Hans Blix 1986, IAEO
- The nuclear industry can take
- a catastrophe Chernobyl
- once every year.
4The longterm impact of Chernobyl
5The long term impact of Chernobyl
6The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Problems in describing the true dimension of
the catastrophe - Information to assess the dimension of the
health effects were kept secret or were falsified
(USSR) during the first 5 years - The international bodies, IAEO and the
Chernobyl Forum (200 Western and 500 Russian
scientists, also withhelt and falsified important
findings 1991 no mentioning of the rise of
Thyroid cancer in children although it was
proved. - No health problem can directly be attributed
to the radiation dose of Chernobyl. - 1991 the Soviet Union fell apart, the health
system and the social system declined, the three
republics Russia, Belarus and Ukraine hat to cope
with the health and the social effects on their
own - Medical discussion on the effects of low
dose radiation
7The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Chernobyl health impacts
- Rise of cancer, not only thyroid, but also
leukemia, breast cancer and other cancers - Rise of non-cancer diseases (exceeds the cancer
cases) - blood system, stroke and heart attack,
thyroid endocrinological diseases, (Basedow,
Hashimoto, Diabetes), lens diseases - Genetic effects congenital malformations, rise
in perinatal mortality, rise of stillbirth
8Thyroid Cancer Rise Belarus
9Thyroid cancer rise incidence Ukraine
10Thyroid cancer rise in Adults
- Studies show specific rise in female thyroid
cancer - Ukraine M. Fuzik A. Prysyazhnyuk (2011)
- Russia Ivanov, V.K. et al (2012)
- Belarus Frenzel, C. Lengfelder, E. (2011)
- Czech Republic Mürbeth et al. (2004)
- Specific epidemiologic studies should be
undertaken in other highly contaminated areas in
Middle and Western Europe Austria, Bavaria,
Estonia, Romania
11The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Chernobyl-related cancers
- Clean-up workers increase in cancer by 20
(Okeanov,2004) increase in acute and of chronic
lymphatic leukemia (Zablotska et al, 2012),
increase in thyroid cancer (Kesmiene et al, 2012) - Gomel region, Belarus increase in cancer rate by
55,9 - Belarus overall 40 (Okeanov et al. 2004)
- Increase in breast cancer in contaminated areas
Gomel Mogilov (Belarus) and Chernigov, Kiev,
Zhytomir (Ukraine), (Pukkala et al. 2006) - Increase in leukaemia (children) in contaminated
areas of Ukraine Significant if the
contamination is higher than 10 mSv (Noshenko,
2010) and Belarus (A. Körblein 2013) for babies
in the first year after Chernobyl - Increase in number of brain tumours for children
under 6 years (Ukraine) 5,8 fold (Orlov,
Sharevsky, 2002)
12The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Chernobyl, non-cancer diseases
- Prysyazhnyuk et al in-utero radiated children
- Risk of cardiovascular diseases increased
compared to non-radiated children (57.8 vs.
31.8, p lt 0.05) - Prysyazhnyuk, A. Ye. Et al (2002). Review of
epidemiological finding in the study of medical
consequences of the Chernobyl accident in
Ukrainian population. In Imanaka, T. (Ed.),
Recent Research Activities on the Chernobyl NPP
Accident in Belarus, Ukraine and Russia,
KURRI-KR-79 (Kyoto University, Kyoto), pp.
188287.
13The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Non-cancer diseases Chernobyl shows adverse
effects on childrens bloodcells - Study of 1,251 children from 1993 -1998 in the
region of Narodichevsky/Shitomir - Ukraine - Data show a statistically significant reduction
in red and white blood cell counts, platelet
counts and haemoglobin with increasing
residential 137Cs soil contamination - Stepanova et al Environmental Health 2008, 721
14The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Chernobyl non-cancer diseases
- Radiation severely affects the human brain
- Dose-related cognitive and neurophysiological
abnormalities among prenatally exposed children
after the Chernobyl accident . - Gestation ages of 8 weeks at gt20 mSv on the
fetus and gt300 mSv on the thyroid in utero - Gestation ages at 1625 weeks, abnormalities at
Doses gt10 mSv and gt200 mSv, respectively. - K. Loganovsky, Kiew, UkraineDo low doses of
ionizing radiation affext the human brain?
15The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Brain effects on adults liquidators health
- Radiation-associated cerebrovascular effects
(stroke) were obtained at gt150 -250 mSv. - Dose-related neuropsychiatric,neurophysiological,
neuropsychological, and neuroimaging
abnormalities following exposure to gt300 mSv - neurophysiological and neuroimaging radiation
markers at doses gt1000 mSv were revealed - (source K. Loganovsky 2009, 2015)
16The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Non-cancer diseases liquidators health
- Main cause of death stroke, heart attack
- second cause of death cancer
- Yablokov (2009) looked at studies on liquidators
from the health registries in Obninsk and in
Kiev estimates that out of 830,000 liquidators - 112,000 125,000 have died
17The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Genetic and teratogen effects on reproductive
health - Increase of stillbirth in Southern Bavaria
- Increase of stillbirth in Eastern European
countries (Greece, Hungary, Poland, Sweden).
Effects not so clear in central Europe (Austria,
Denmark, Germany, Italy, Norway, Switzerland) - Sources Scherb et al (1999) European stillbirth
proportions before and after Chernobyl accident
H. Scherb, E. Weigelt Spatial-temporal logistic
regression of the cesium contamination and the
time trend in annual stillbirth proportions on a
district level in Bavaria, 1980 to 1993
18The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Increase in perinatal mortality in Germany and
Poland corresponding to 137Cs contamination - Increase in congenital malformations in Belarus,
Ukraine, Bavaria corresponding to 137Cs soil
contamination - Sources D. Lazjuk et al (1997), W. Wertelecki
(2010, 2014), Scherb Weigelt, 2003 - http//www.alfred-koerblein.de/chernobyl/english/i
ndex.htm
19The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Genetic effects
- - Down Syndrom in Berlin (Sperling et al 1993,
2012) - - Chromosomal aberrations in children of
liquidators (Yablokov 2009) - - Changes in the birth ratio of male/female
newborns (Hagen Scherb et al 2007 ff)
20The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Lessons from Chernobyl to Fukushima
- - Prerequisite for elaborated epidemiological
studies is good data from all the contaminated
population and workers. - - Without having data one cannot find anything.
21The long term impact of Chernobyl
- Lessons for Fukushima
- Systematic health check-ups needed for
- All clean-up workers
- All evacuees, adults and children
- All the population remaining in the contaminated
zones and provinces
22The long term impact of Chernobyl
Thank you for your attention