Abstract

Abstract Measurements of indoor radon concentrations in the village Umhausen (2600 inhabitants, Otztal valley, Tyrol, Austria) revealed unusually high indoor radon concentrations up to 274,000 Bq m −3 . The medians measured on the basements were 3750 Bq m −3 in winter and 361 Bq m −3 in summer, those on the ground floors were 1180 Bq m −3 and 210 Bq m −3 , respectively. Seventy-one per cent of the houses showed basement radon concentrations above the Austrian action level of 400 Bq m −3 in winter, 33% in summer. There are indications that the high radon concentrations are due to a giant rock slide about 8700 years ago. The unusually high radon concentrations in Umhausen coincide with a statistically significant increase in lung cancer mortality. For the period 1970–1991 the age and sex standardized mortality rate is 3.85 (95% confidence interval: 2.9 to 5.1). The control population is the total population of Tyrol (630,000 inhabitants).

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