Some of the Chernobyl research
indicates that the latent period of thyroid cancer was much shorter than what
has been recently stated by experts. The implications about the present cases of
thyroid cancer in Fukushima are obvious.
(revised on 2014/03/10)
Last
month there was an important finding about thyroid cancer research in the blog written by
Paul Langley. He points out a serious contradiction in the claims
that prominent “health physicists” have been making about the cases of thyroid
cancer that have appeared in Fukushima since the nuclear accident. At the time
he wrote this, I expected the news to go viral, but I’ve seen scant mention of
it on social networks, and of course, the mass media did not notice it.
The
reason for this oversight may be that Paul Langley’s blog posts are superb, but long and heavy on detail. Casual readers may
have passed over important information without recognizing its significance. So
I will try to summarize the main points and post the most interesting citations.
After
the second anniversary of the Fukushima Daiichi catastrophe, a sharp increase
in childhood thyroid cancer was recorded in Fukushima Prefecture. Health
officials hesitated to attribute the cause to the nuclear accident because they
said that it was simply too early to be finding cases of thyroid cancer. The
Chernobyl studies all indicated, they said, that the mean latency period was at
least four years. Experts in health physics outside Japan also repeated this
claim. They seemed to wish that no one would remember their middle school math lessons and point out that a mean indicates that in the sample many values were higher and lower than the mean. Thus it is not surprising that thyroid cancer cases would appear much earlier than four years after the accident. A high number of early cases should be cause for alarm because it would indicate many more are yet to come by the mean time of onset.
Paul
Langley found several studies that stated the latency period was much
shorter than four years. According to these studies, an increase in the rate of
thyroid cancer incidence is exactly what one would expect to find two years
after a nuclear accident. One of the authors was none other than Shinichi
Yamashita himself, the former head of the Fukushima Prefectural Health
Management Survey Review Committee.
Paul
Langley, quoting an article in The Japan Times, noted that
this committee has stated that Chernobyl data shows that the latency period for thyroid
cancer is 4–5 years, and that the progression of disease was slow in the case
of the Chernobyl children.
Paul
then found this quote from a 1998 research paper of which
Dr. Yamashita was one of the authors:
“The
high incidence of childhood thyroid cancer in Belarus is suspected to be due to
radiation exposure after the Chernobyl reactor accident… All
of the preceding thyroid carcinomas developed after longer latency periods, whereas tumors arising in the Chernobyl
population began developing with surprising rapidity and short latency.”
(Shirahige et. al.)
Other research papers say:
“… absence of marked latency period is
another feature of radiation-induced thyroid cancers caused in Belarus as a
result of this accident.” (Malko)
“[the latent period for thyroid cancer is] 2.5
years, based on low estimates used for lifetime risk modeling of low-level
ionizing radiation studies.” (Howard)
So about that latency period, which is it? 1
year, 2. 5 years, 4 years or 5 years, and does it really matter anyway? The
denial of a causal relationship is the worst sort of deflection and quibbling
by people who are highly motivated to avoid the truth. Japanese authorities claim that the high number of cancer cases found in Fukushima is a result of having used very sensitive equipment, with very close attention paid to a particular group. They imply that the same rate of thyroid cancer would be found in any other group subjected to the same intense analysis, but they refuse to carry out such a comparison in a region far away from Fukushima. This is typical of official studies of radiological disasters. Hundreds of studies are done, except the ones which seem most likely to produce results unfavorable to institutions which would be legally responsible for damages to health and property.
Sources:
Howard, John. “Minimum Latency & Types or Categories of Cancer” Administrator World Trade Center Health Program,
9.11 Monitoring and Treatment,
Revision: May 1, 2013.
Kyodo. “Thyroid
cancer found in 12 minors in Fukushima.” The Japan Times, June 6, 2013.
Langley,
Paul. The Characterization of Chernobyl Findings
by Fukushima Medical University’s Thyroid Survey, September 8, 2013.
Malko, Mikhail V. “Chernobyl Radiation-induced Thyroid Cancers
in Belarus.”
Joint Institute of Power and Nuclear Research, National Academy of Sciences of Belarus. 2002.
Joint Institute of Power and Nuclear Research, National Academy of Sciences of Belarus. 2002.
Shirahige Y, Ito M,
Ashizawa K, Motomura T, Yokoyama N, Namba H, Fukata S, Yokozawa T, Ishikawa N,
Mimura T, Yamashita S, Sekine I, Kuma K, Ito K, Nagataki S. “Childhood thyroid cancer: comparison of Japan and Belarus.” Endocrine Journal, 1998 Apr;45(2):203-9.
No comments:
Post a Comment