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3.
Health Phys ; 47(2): 243-52, 1984 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6480352

ABSTRACT

The New England states have a long involved history of radon in individual well water supplies. As a result of these previous findings on the abundance of radon, coupled with its potential health impact, the New England Radiological Health Committee (NERHC) formulated a technical working group in 1980 which was charged with evaluating the possibility of developing uniform concentration guidelines for radon in individual domestic water supplies. This working group determined that the current ICRP Publication 30 metabolic model for the gastrointestinal (GI) tract was inadequate to address the empirically observed rates of 222Rn removal from the body. A modification to the ICRP Publication 30 GI tract model is proposed which attempts to resolve these differences. Calculations are presented, using both the original and modified ICRP Publication 30 models, which indicate that individual potable water supplies containing 222Rn concentrations as high as 400,000 pCi/l. do not significantly increase the probability of stomach or intestinal cancer, as defined by the BEIR III risk estimates. Since this paper deals exclusively with the GI tract, no attempt is made to address the lung burden imposed by the contribution of radon released into the household air by aeration at the tap or other fixtures. Only when the contribution of the radon water source term to both the respiratory and ingestion pathways is evaluated as a whole can any meaningful standard for 222Rn in individual domestic water supplies be established.


Subject(s)
Digestive System/metabolism , Radon/metabolism , Water Pollution, Radioactive , Water Supply , Gastrointestinal Neoplasms/etiology , Humans , Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced , New England , Risk
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