Abstract

Following the Fukushima nuclear power plant disaster, assessment of internal radiation exposure was indispensable to predict radiation-related health threats to residents of neighboring areas. Although many evaluations of internal radiation in residents living north and west of the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant are available, there is little information on residents living in areas south of the plant, which were similarly affected by radio-contamination from the disaster. To assess the internal radio-contamination in residents living in affected areas to the south of the plant or who were evacuated into Iwaki city, a whole body counter (WBC) screening program of internal radio-contamination was performed on visitors to the Jyoban hospital in Iwaki city, which experienced less contamination than southern areas adjacent to the nuclear plant. The study included 9,206 volunteer subjects, of whom 6,446 were schoolchildren aged 4–15 years. Measurements began one year after the incident and were carried out over the course of two years. Early in the screening period only two schoolchildren showed Cs-137 levels that were over the detection limit (250 Bq/body), although their Cs-134 levels were below the detection limit (220 Bq/body). Among the 2,760 adults tested, 35 (1.3%) had detectable internal radio-contamination, but only for Cs-137 (range: 250 Bq/body to 859 Bq/body), and not Cs-134. Of these 35 subjects, nearly all (34/35) showed elevated Cs-137 levels only during the first year of the screening. With the exception of potassium 40, no other radionuclides were detected during the screening period. The maximum annual effective dose calculated from the detected Cs-137 levels was 0.029 and 0.028 mSv/year for the schoolchildren and adults, respectively, which is far below the 1 mSv/year limit set by the government of Japan. Although the data for radiation exposure during the most critical first year after the incident are unavailable due to a lack of systemic measurements, the present results suggest that internal radio-contamination levels more than one year after the incident were minimal for residents living south of the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, and that the annual additional effective doses derived from internal Cs contamination were negligible. Thus, internal radio-contamination of residents living in southern radio-contaminated areas appears to be generally well controlled.

Highlights

  • Following the Great East Japan Earthquake (GEJE) on March 11, 2011, various health threats have emerged at different levels and times [1,2]

  • Among the areas affected by the GEJE, regions surrounding the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant commanded more careful attention to health threats, since these regions were exposed to large amounts of radionuclides that were released from the crippled nuclear plant [7,8]

  • Using whole body counter (WBC), internal radiation exposure screening was performed for Jyoban Hospital visitors between April 2012 and December 2014

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Summary

Introduction

Following the Great East Japan Earthquake (GEJE) on March 11, 2011, various health threats have emerged at different levels and times [1,2]. Dietary intervention measures that urged residents with high levels of internal contamination to consume only inspected food was quite successful for eight of the nine subjects who showed high internal radio-contamination, which was reduced by half after 3 months This three-month period corresponds to the biological half-life of Cs. Compared to the systematic WBC monitoring in areas north of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, there is less information on internal radio-contamination for residents living south of the plant [21], even though the radio-contamination in this region was similar to the northern areas. Within three years of the earthquake these elevated levels gradually decreased to undetectable levels for all but one study subject Taken together, these findings suggest that internal radio-contamination of residents in radio-contaminated areas both north and south of the plant is minimal and generally well controlled

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