著者
Masahiro HOSODA Kazumasa INOUE Mitsuaki OKA Yasutaka OMORI Kazuki IWAOKA Shinji TOKONAMI
出版者
日本保健物理学会
雑誌
保健物理 (ISSN:03676110)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.51, no.1, pp.41-50, 2016 (Released:2016-07-06)
参考文献数
50
被引用文献数
2 25

Many nuclear facilities are located within Aomori Prefecture, Japan. However, no detailed dose rate distribution map of Aomori Prefecture, including its mountain regions has been reported since the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident. A car-borne survey which used a 3-in × 3-in NaI(Tl) scintillation spectrometer was carried out throughout the prefecture for the purposes of making a dose distribution map and estimating the annual external dose. The average absorbed dose rate in air and the annual effective dose were found to be 22 ± 5 nGy h-1 and 0.20 ± 0.08 mSv, respectively. These average values for all of Aomori Prefecture were respectively 44% and 59% of the nationwide average values. The average values with standard deviations of activity concentrations in soil of 40K, 238U and 232Th were 234 ± 148, 15 ± 6, 12 ± 6 Bq kg-1, respectively. The average values of contributions of 40K, 238U and 232Th to absorbed dose rates in air were 39%, 29% and 32%, respectively. The contributions of 134Cs and 137Cs to the absorbed dose rates in air were judged to be negligible.
著者
Shin'ichi KUDO Keiko YOSHIMOTO Hiroshige FURUTA Kazumasa INOUE Masahiro FUKUSHI Fumiyoshi KASAGI
出版者
日本保健物理学会
雑誌
保健物理 (ISSN:03676110)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.53, no.3, pp.146-153, 2018 (Released:2018-11-27)
参考文献数
41
被引用文献数
7

Whether exposure to radiation at low dose and at low dose rate is related to leukemia mortality and morbidity remains controversial. Cohort studies of nuclear workers chronically exposed to radiation at low dose and at low dose rate in their workplaces provide an opportunity to directly evaluate the risks of leukemia in the lower dose ranges. Previous findings have come mostly from Western countries, with few from Asian countries. The present study aimed to examine radiation’s effects on mortality from leukemia, in a cohort of Japanese nuclear workers. The cohort consisted of 204,103 workers, who were followed from 1991 to 2010, with a total of 2.89 million person-years. The mean age and mean cumulative dose at the age at the end of follow-up were 55.6 years and 13.8 mSv. During the study, 209 leukemia deaths were observed. The linear excess relative risk (ERR) for all types of leukemia was negative, but not significant (ERR/Sv = -0.54; 90% confidence interval; -4.04, 2.96). Specific types of leukemia also showed no significant risks. A significant radiation-leukemia association for mortality was not observed in this study of Japanese nuclear workers. The cohort, however, is still young. Further follow-up is needed to obtain more reliable estimates of leukemia risks for Japanese workers exposed to low dose and low-dose rate radiation.