Japan’s radioactive fallout could have silver lining
Low exposure to the Nagasaki atomic blast resulted in longer lifespans
By Lawrence Solomon  
Financial Post (Toronto) 
Mar 22, 2011

The immense suffering that the Japanese are enduring in the aftermath of their 
earthquake and tsunami is now compounded by torment over radiation releases 
from the Fukushima nuclear plant.

While the torment is understandable, based on the reported amounts of radiation 
released, it is uncalled for. The evidence from Japan’s populace — inadvertent 
guinea pigs in the largest radiation experiment ever, in the aftermath of the 
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 — indicates that fears over 
radiation can be overblown.

Those who survived the immediate atomic blasts but were near Ground Zero died 
at a high rate from excess exposure to radiation. The tens of thousands more 
distant from Ground Zero, and who received lower exposures to radiation, did 
not die in droves. To the contrary, and surprisingly, they outlived their 
counterparts in the general population who received no exposure to radiation 
from the blasts.

These findings come from the Atomic Bomb Disease Institute of the Nagasaki 
University School of Medicine, which has been analyzing the medical records of 
survivors continuously since 1968. The voluminous records — based in part on 
the free twice-a-year medical examinations that 83,050 registered Nagasaki 
survivors received — provided the researchers with a database of 2.5 million 
examination items to mine. To determine how the survivors fared, the 
researchers compared the survivors with Japanese men and women of the same age 
who had not been exposed to radiation.

“Among about 100,000 A-bomb survivors registered at Nagasaki University School 
of Medicine, male subjects exposed to 31-40 cGy [centigrays] showed 
significantly lower mortality from non-cancerous diseases than age-matched 
unexposed males,” the researchers found. “And the death rate for exposed male 
and female was smaller than that for unexposed.” The 31-40 cGy is a measure of 
radiation absorption higher than the general population in the vicinity of the 
plants is likely to have received.

The University of Nagasaki study, whose results were consistent with other 
studies done of the A-bomb survivors, found that high exposures to radiation 
kill while moderate exposures provide overall general health benefits. While 
some levels of low exposure did produce a small number of additional cancer 
deaths, these cancer deaths were more than offset by lower death rates from 
other causes, such as heart disease and circulatory ailments. The study’s 
bottom line: “the low doses of A-bomb radiation increased lifespan of A-bomb 
survivors.”

Other studies of A-bomb survivors, which sliced the data in different ways, 
have also found encouraging news. Those exposed to fewer than 20 cGy of 
radiation experienced fewer cancer deaths than the general population. The 
unborn — thought to be at especial risk — showed no adverse effects under 10 
cGy. And no genetic defects were found among the 90,000 children and 
grandchildren of survivor parents who were exposed to average doses of 40 cGy 
to 60 cGy. Based on the information available to date, all these exposures 
exceed those the general population in the vicinity of the Fukushima plant is 
likely to have received.

The real-life studies of Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors indicate that 
radiation affects the human body much as arsenic, sodium and many other 
substances do — they are beneficial in small doses, but can be harmful in 
overdoses. Yet the conventional scientific wisdom rejects these studies, and a 
multitude of other real-life studies, in favour of what is known as the Linear 
No-Threshold Assumption. Under this assumption, all exposure to radiation, no 
matter how small, is harmful in direct proportion to the dose. It is called an 
assumption because there is no proof of its validity. In fact, the scientists 
who espouse it freely admit that no proof for their assumption can ever be had 
because the risk is too small to measure statistically. In the absence of 
proof, they say, the only safe course is to assume danger.

Yet assuming danger where none exists is in itself dangerous, particularly in a 
country with the culture of Japan. The atomic bomb survivors were known as 
hibakusha or “explosion-affected people”— a stigma connoting damaged goods that 
made them less marriageable, less worthy of association, and less worthy even 
in their own minds. Even if those recently irradiated by Fukushima escape this 
epithet, the burden of living in fear for their health and that of their 
offspring could be great.

Damage to the psyche aside, some 200,000 people have been evacuated from 10 
towns in the vicinity of the nuclear plant, many of whom now find themselves in 
poorly heated makeshift shelters where they must make do without adequate food 
and water, and numerous others have been told to stay indoors. Worse, if the 
budding panic over radiation spreads, the region around Fukushima — one of 
Japan’s most productive farming areas — may be tainted or even abandoned for 
agriculture. The Japanese government has already banned the sale of milk and 
spinach produced in the plant’s environs, and consumers in other countries, 
fearing contamination, are shying away from all Japanese produce.

The only evidence that exists as to the health of humans who have been 
irradiated at low levels points to a benefit, not a harm. Difficult though it 
may be to overcome the fear of radiation that has been drubbed into us since 
childhood, there is no scientific proof whatsoever to view the radiation 
emitted from the Fukushima plant as dangerous to the Japanese population, and 
certainly no reason for the Japanese to view those living near the plant as 
damaged goods. In all likelihood, though, many will nevertheless be viewed as 
such. If so, that will be one more tragedy heaped among the others that the 
affected Japanese population will need to endure.

Lawrence Solomon is executive director of Energy Probe, an anti-nuclear 
organization, and the author of The Deniers.
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