Good morning and thank you,
I would like to thank the organizers for
inviting me to submit a session to this conference. I wish to extend my thanks to the members and ancestors of Treaty six upon whose land we meet.
When I looked at the program and saw myself bookended between Drs Alan Waltar and Neil Alexander, I had to admit that I didn’t feel particularly comfortable. However, in this world of increasing uncertainty, what better time to combine our efforts for a safer world?
When I looked at the program and saw myself bookended between Drs Alan Waltar and Neil Alexander, I had to admit that I didn’t feel particularly comfortable. However, in this world of increasing uncertainty, what better time to combine our efforts for a safer world?
My career has been that of a rural family
physician, a jack of all trades and a master of many. I was working in Ile-A-la
Crosse where I and my colleagues had four patients, all uranium mine workers with
lupus (systemic lupus erythematosus); it is not a common disease and even less
common in men. There was no data on the incidence of the disease among First
Nations. A Board of Inquiry was in Northern Saskatchewan as part of the
environmental and social assessment before the opening of a series of new
mines, McLean Lake being one of them. We presented our idea that, should the
mining proposal go forward as we expected it would, monies be set aside for a prospective
study of the health of those working in the mine and the populations affected. It
would be something that had never been done, a prospective population health
study. It was not done but in 2012 several publications linked lupus to uranium
– likely to properties of the metal itself and not to its radioactivity.
In March 2011, as Executive Director of
Physicians for Global Survival, the Canadian affiliate of IPPNW, our office was
suddenly in demand for comments on the expected health effects of the Fukushima
accident. It was frustrating to deal with public ignorance but it was equally
frustrating to get information out of physicists, regulators, and waste
management specialists.
We started with the idea of information
pamphlets but then collated our material, eventually publishing a book, “From
Hiroshima to Fukushima to You”, A Primer on Radiation and Health, published in
2014.
A flurry of emails confirmed that we had
filled a gap – among the letters, five physicists who self-identified as having
worked in the nuclear industry wrote detailed critiques of it. All of them
complemented us upon tackling the difficult subject, all of them disagreed with
our position on nuclear power.
So “What do doctors say about ionizing
radiation?”
Frankly most physicians don’t say a lot.
Ionizing radiation is lumped in with pesticides, heavy metals and other
environmental contaminants – the belief being that “you shouldn’t get too much
of it”. Several recent studies illustrated frightening knowledge gaps – for
example only 55% of physician respondents in one study knew that MRI’s did not
employ ionizing radiation.
Another study, indicated that almost 80% did not know the doses of usual
imaging and almost the same number did not know that MRIs and ultra-sounds do
not use ionizing radiation.
This is a little worrisome; radiation
exposure from medical imaging is accumulative. Physicians are responsible for
the largest body burden of the effects of ionizing radiation that most people
carry.
What do the members of IPPNW (International
Physicians for Prevention of Nuclear War) and their colleagues have to say
about ionizing radiation?
We believe that you cannot really get too
little of it. We believe in the precautionary principle in that, if you don’t
know the effects over a long time, you shouldn’t do it. An overwhelming
percentage of the membership are radiologists. We share your concern about the
safe handling of radioactive materials including those that are medically
indicated. We think that it is presumptive for anyone to believe that they know
everything about ionizing radiation.
Starting from the same place
In 1895, Wilhelm Roentgen discovered rays
that penetrated paper and wood and made history by imaging his wife’s hand
complete with wedding ring. He called the rays “x-rays” after “x”, the unknown
quantity in algebra.
In 1896, Henri Becquerel put his
experimental equipment – unexposed photographic film and a rock containing
uranium – into a drawer. To his surprise, the rock left an image on the
photographic paper and he had discovered radioactivity.
Marie Curie working on her doctoral thesis,
was exploring the phenomenon that Becquerel had discovered. She and her
husband, Pierre, were first to call the rays “radioactive”. When she isolated
uranium, the remaining ore was even more radioactive than the uranium so she
began the painstaking process of isolating elements and found both polonium and
radium in 1898.
Uranium has atomic number 92 and, in
its most common radioisotope with 46 neutrons in the nucleus, an atomic weight
of 238. It undergoes alpha decay, losing
2 protons and 2 neutrons to become Thorium-234.
Removing uranium, a weak alpha and gamma
emitter, effectively concentrates the radioactivity in the remaining ore.
Polonium-210 is probably the most
lethal element on earth. Its alpha particles convey 6000 times the radiation energy
as those of radium. You might recall the double spy, Litvinenko, who
experienced deliberate radioactive poisoning in the UK. The dose was probably
no larger than a grain of sugar or salt.
Uranium is a common metal found
throughout the earth’s crust so we all carry a few of each of the molecules within
ourselves – we are living walking uranium decay chains.
The radium that Marie found was
fascinating. It glowed green in the dark so found use in dial painting for
clocks and watches through the 1920’s.
Because of its mysterious qualities,
radium became a hot commodity amongst doctors and a variety of healers. Radium-laced
products were sold for health improvement, in cosmetics, and, ironically, for
cancer prevention. After radon was discovered in 1900, it, too, entered the
circus.
X-rays also experienced commercial
success. Doctors were thrilled to adapt and adopt x-rays – both diagnostically
and therapeutically. Within a year, reports surfaced of skin damage directly
attributed to radiation; and by the turn of the century, the link between x-rays
and cancer was already known. Radiologists, typically using an unprotected left
hand for focusing beams, developed skin cancer at such an alarming rate that
the connection was strikingly obvious.
The early twentieth century was notable
for its free-for-all human experimentation; people were remarkably silly about
their experiments – one man put his head under an x-ray tube for an entire hour
subsequently losing his hair. The picture acquired was useless but it unleashed
to a host of charlatans using x-rays for cosmetic hair removal.
Enter Regulators
In 1928, the International X-Ray and
Radium Protection Committee (IXRPC) was founded to propose guidelines on
radiation protection. In 1934 it established the concept of “tolerance dose”. Scientists
from the Manhattan project recommended that the US create a committee to
monitor radiation protection and the National Committee on Radiation Protection
(NRCP) was formed.
In 1950, the IXRPC was renamed the
International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP).
It is also in the mid-1950’s that physicians
and regulators begin to drift apart. My talk is not to mend the rift but I
thought that I would open the discussion about two areas of disagreement:
1. Conflict of Interest
The website for the Canadian Radiation
Protection Association says:
“Our Mission: we strive to ensure the safe
use of radiation by providing scientific knowledge, education, expertise and
policy guidance for radiation protection.
Our vision: To be the expert voice of Canadian
radiation safety professionals, both nationally and internationally”
And additionally: “We strive to ensure the
safe use of radiation by providing scientific knowledge, education, expertise
and policy guidance for radiation protection.”
No one amongst the organizations that I represent
would fault these goals; in fact, you should take pride in them.
Your conference brochure illustrates a
problem strikingly similar to that about which physicians have been struggling
for years. Your meeting here is sponsored largely by the very industry that
your organization is purported to regulate.
The IAEA, the International Atomic Energy
Agency, is mandated to license and regulate while simultaneously promoting the
use of nuclear energy. That this is not generally seen as a conflict of
interest is amazing.
2. the Bomb Studies: RERF
In 1945, the US dropped atomic bombs on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Tens of thousands of people died
instantly followed by tens of thousands over the next months. There was
absolute chaos among the survivors. They had no idea what had hit them. Physicians
and other health care providers entered the area to care for the wounded not
knowing what they were dealing with, Physicians were in constant contact with
one another – puzzled over what kind of disease they were seeing? People badly
burned. People seemingly to improve then develop black spots and die. And then,
they themselves suffering easy exhaustion.
For the first couple of years, the US
imposed a complete black-out on information and restricted reporters to Japan.
Japanese medical journals were censored. The first winter after the bombs was
brutally cold, and food was scarce. No outside aid was permitted.
Americans treated the Japanese as scum,
with disrespect and disdain. The Japanese viewed them with suspicion.
In this environment, in 1947, the
Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission was formed. It began its work in 1950 and, over
the next ten years registered 195,000 survivors in the Life Span Study. It is a
longitudinal epidemiological study that followed and still follows the lives of
atomic bomb survivors. The name was changed in 1975 to the Radiation Effects
Research Foundation (RERF).
Ihe ICRP (International Commission on
Radiation Protection), the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects
of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR), and the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) all believe that the RERF estimates are applicable to all situations
involving radiation risks including workers and medical x-rays. The US
committee on Biological Effects of Ionizing Radiation (BEIR) based its results
on RERF as well until 2006.
We disagree and believe that there are
problems with the data.
1. Based on the fact that the death
rate had returned to normal among survivors, the commission assumed a normal
population. A geneticist who had been in the studies from the beginning stated
that “we all assumed that there would be a strong selection effect, and we had
all kinds of meetings about how we were going to handle it. But we found
nothing. So we assumed that it had disappeared.”
2. The studies were initiated late -
after the deaths from infections, early leukemias and deaths from destroyed
immunity, some people being registered as long as 14 years after the bombs
exploded.
3. Children under ten and elderly were
under-represented so the population doesn’t represent normal demographics.
4. The commission represented the enemy.
It was faced with enormous suspicion by Japanese victims, who thought that they
were being treated as “guinea pigs”. The commission was set up to study, not
treat, and autopsies were part of the study.
5. There was shame attached to being a
victim and social pressures for hibakusha
to remain silent so there is no certainty that a representative sample was
obtained.
6. It was insensitive to the study
population. People were summoned for examination during working hours costing
them a day’s wages.
7. Segregation of facilities - the
American and Japanese doctors dined separately.
8. Data collected by Japanese
physicians who had first-hand experience was dismissed, their medical journals
heavily censored, factor which increased suspicion about the ABCC.
9. The scatter of doses of radiation
was based upon the fall-out from the Nevada where Japanese style houses were
built and the subsequent exposures estimated. The individual doses were
assigned on the memories of the victims - where they were at the time of the
blast. No account was made of their activities immediately thereafter or
whether they ate or drank any radioactive materials.
10. Since the US exchanged amnesty to
doctors who conducted human experimentation for their data, it was rumoured
that the Japanese investigators were from that cohort. (As US politics shows
us, a rumour need not be based on truth to affect peoples’ behavior.)
11. The Commission was composed of
health physicists, nuclear physicists, radiobiologists and biostatisticians so
the rather unusual situation existed where those on the ground examining
victims as physicians were discounted and those coming to collect data had
little or no medical training. To our knowledge no epidemiologists were
employed.
12. The RERF did not and does not
examine non-cancer deaths except for aplastic anemia which was reclassified as
leukemia. The largest category of deaths amongst the survivors were classified
as “a precise diagnosis was not made”. The assumption that the only long term
effect of ionizing radiation exposure is cancer was erroneous. It will have
missed all deaths due to infectious disease that may have had an underlying
cancer or pre-cancerous condition.
13. Finally, we contend that the health
effects from a single, external, high-energy blast of radiation and the untold
numbers of short-lived, artificially created radioisotopes are different that
the usual low-dose and/or chronic exposure from nuclear power plants or
technical devices.
Conclusion:
Let me answer the question, how should the
nuclear industry improve public confidence?
Whether or not there is an actual conflict
of interest, regulatory agencies should be distanced from industry. Currently
it appears that regulatory agencies are in bed with industry. Admittedly there
are only so many nuclear physicists available, people move from positions in
one organization or company to another, much like ex-politicians. A phenomenon
of “regulatory creep” occurs where the regulatory bodies move closer and closer
to those they regulate.
Question Authority, in this case, the continued
use of the RERF statistics without questioning their application to
environmental standards. Most of us would not 1950’s physics as having the
final word on nuclear radiation – we are being asked to accept research set up
with 1950’s techniques and standards?
Finally, you
should be congratulated for choosing career paths that have an assured future.
Should all use of ionizing radiation in industry, medicine, power and military
arms end tomorrow, your association will continue to exist – in fact, given the
radioactive waste produced in the last 60 years, you might have the most envied
job security, universally legal, of any career on earth.
Should the UN support a nuclear weapons ban
treaty, dismantling, re-purposing and storage would provide increased job
opportunities. Should every nuclear power plant be shut down tomorrow, there
are probably not enough of you to work on regulatory issues surrounding the
decommissioning, an entirely wide-open field of research.
In fact, you may take any political position you wish with regard to ionizing radiation - you be opposed to nuclear bombs, nuclear energy and uranium mining, even medical use of ionizing radiation, and your jobs will still be with you.
In fact, you may take any political position you wish with regard to ionizing radiation - you be opposed to nuclear bombs, nuclear energy and uranium mining, even medical use of ionizing radiation, and your jobs will still be with you.
We all want a safe world, let us combine
our efforts to make it so.
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