-Caveat Lector-

 http://www.the-times.co.uk/news/pages/Sunday-Times/
stinwenws02039.html?999


 Fresh evidence found of
 cancer risk near pylons

 Jonathan Leake and Chris Dignan
 November 28 1999

 A BRITISH scientist has produced the most powerful
 evidence yet of a link between cancer and electricity
 power lines.  His study confirms that people living near
 them are exposed to radiation levels dozens of times
 greater than the legal limit.

 The research, to be released this week, firmly links the
 power lines with childhood leukaemia and other forms of
 cancer.  The levels recorded in some areas were two
 times higher than the legal maximum allowed for adult
 nuclear power workers -- the group permitted maximum
 radiation exposure.

 Its most serious implication is that more than 23,000
 homes built under or near power lines are unsafe,
 especially for children.  The effect of the fields can
 extend more than 100 yards either side of the lines.

 Professor Denis Henshaw, of Bristol University's human
 radiation effects group, showed three years ago that
 there was a theoretical mechanism whereby power lines
 could increase human uptake of the radioactive gases
 produced naturally in the soil and also of traffic
 pollutants.  His latest study quantifies this effect in
 the field and shows that power lines are indeed linked
 to childhood leukaemia and other cancers.  Henshaw took
 2,000 field measurements to support his research.

 A university insider described the findings as dynamite.
 "The study has serious implications for the electricity
 industry, which could face huge compensation claims and
 pressure to move its pylons."

 Children are especially vulnerable to radiation and
 pollution damage because they have more growing and
 dividing cells than adults.  Such cells are far more
 prone than adult ones to become cancerous when exposed
 to hazardous substances.

 The research will be published in the International
 Journal of Radiation Biology.  Its editor, Professor
 Gordon Steel, said it was a comprehensive study of how
 electric fields of the kind generated by power lines
 and, to a lesser extent, domestic appliances, could
 increase the uptake of radioactive gases and pollutants
 by humans.  Details will be revealed at a press
 conference at the Institute of Mechanical Engineers in
 London on Wednesday.

 The study, funded by the Department of Health and the
 Medical Research Council, is backed by another carried
 out by Sir Richard Doll, due for publication in The
 Lancet on Friday.  Doll, who discovered the link between
 tobacco and lung cancer, has collated details of every
 childhood leukaemia case in the past four years to try
 to find common causes, including links with electric
 fields.

 Childhood leukaemia has long been seen as a target for
 such studies since it occurs in clusters, suggesting a
 common cause that is probably linked to local
 environmental factors.  Clusters associated with power
 lines have been noted for years but the electricity
 industry has insisted such associations were too weak
 to be significant.

 Three years ago Henshaw discovered the complex
 interactions between the alternating electric fields
 surrounding power lines and the radioactive breakdown
 products of naturally occurring radon gas.  His theory
 was dismissed by the electricity industry and, more
 importantly, the government's National Radiological
 Protection Board (NRPB).

 Henshaw is understood to have shown that in some areas
 children living near power lines could receive doses of
 95 millisieverts of radiation a year, compared with the
 maximum for homes of one millisievert.  Nuclear workers
 are allowed a maximum dose of 50, soon to be reduced to
 20.

 Henshaw was unwilling to comment on the study before
 publication but said:  "It is clear that if there is
 radon gas or traffic fumes in the air near pylons, then
 people living nearby will suffer increased exposure
 because of the electric field."

 The National Grid and electricity distribution companies
 could find themselves in a difficult position.
 A spokesman said it was too early to comment.

 The findings will be welcomed by victims and their
 families, some of whom have tried to sue for
 compensation.  Ray and Denise Studholme, of Bolton,
 launched the first legal case of its kind in Europe in
 1994, when they took Norweb, the electricity supplier,
 to court after their son Simon, 13, died from leukaemia
 in 1992.  They had to drop their action in 1997 after an
 American study, now criticised as flawed, raised doubts
 over a link.  This weekend Ray, 51, said he would
 consider restarting legal action in the light of the
 new evidence.


 Copyright 1999 Times Newspapers Ltd.


 *** NOTICE:  In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107,
 this material is distributed without profit to those who have
 expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information
 for research and educational purposes. ***



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