News Release

Study finds dramatic increase in thyroid cancer

Bush administration called to reassess nuclear power commitment

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Nuclear Policy Research Institute

WASHINGTON, DC – The Nuclear Policy Research Institute (NPRI) today called on the Bush administration to reassess its commitment to the expansion of nuclear power; based on new study reported in the June edition of the International Journal of Epidemiology. The study documents a dramatic increase in thyroid cancers following the 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

According to the study, published in the International Journal of Epidemiology, rates of thyroid cancers among women in Belarus have increased 12-fold in the years since the April 1986 explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine.

The authors noted that "the magnitude of increases observed is remarkable given the relatively limited time interval since Chernobyl."

Additionally, the study points out that children two years and younger at the time of the accident were even more vulnerable, and that their cancers tended to be more invasive and expanded beyond the thyroid gland.

A number of nuclear power plants in the United States have recently faced public safety problems that were unexpected by industry officials. These problems could have had catastrophic effect for the American people. Inspectors at Davis-Besse Nuclear Power Plant, located 21 miles southeast of Toledo, Ohio, identified a six-inch deep football-sized hole in the reactor vessel. This hole was initially missed by years of inspections, and would have resulted in a meltdown had it not been identified. At the time the hole was found, 95% of the steel protecting the reactor from meltdown had been eaten away by acid. In 2003 cracks were found in the instrumentation tubes which measure the operations of the South Texas Project nuclear reactors, 90 miles southwest of Houston, Texas, allowing the reactor to leak. Had these leaks not been identified by routine inspection, they could also have eventually resulted in a meltdown.

"Given the disastrous consequences of a major nuclear accident as demonstrated by this new study, we call on the Bush administration to halt its push for funds to subsidize the nuclear power industry, and shift those funds into safe and renewable energy sources such as solar and wind," said Charles Sheehan-Miles, executive director of Nuclear Policy Research Institute.

Pointing out the risk of terrorist attack against one of the 103 operating nuclear plants in the United States, NPRI President Dr. Helen Caldicott said, "Terrorists don't need nuclear weapons. Thanks to the nuclear power industry, they are already deployed all over America, and even terrorists with limited knowledge could cause a meltdown at one of these plants."

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The Nuclear Policy Research Institute will host a symposium, Nuclear Power and Children's Health, in Chicago, Illinois October 15-16, 2004. More details are available at www.nuclearpolicy.org

INTERVIEWS AVAILABLE

Experts are available now for interviews to discuss this study and its implications.

Helen Caldicott, MD
President, Nuclear Policy Research Institute
Dr. Caldicott is a pediatrician and founder of NPRI. She is a 35-year expert on radiation and public health issues. Dr. Caldicott is available for phone interviews from Australia to discuss the medical impact of radiation exposure and the risk of nuclear accident in the United States.

Charles Sheehan-Miles
Executive Director, Nuclear Policy Research Institute
Mr. Sheehan-Miles, a 1991 Gulf War veteran, is a former President of the National Gulf War Resource Center, Inc. Sheehan-Miles is available for interviews to discuss the risk of nuclear accident in the United States and the increase in the use of nuclear power sought by the Bush administration and the nuclear power industry.


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