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1.
Health Phys ; 79(4): 341-57, 2000 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11007456

ABSTRACT

Doses from the ingestion of 134Cs and 137Cs during 12 y following the Chernobyl accident have been estimated for approximately 3 million persons living in rural areas of the Zhitomir, Rivne, and Kyiv Oblasts of northern Ukraine. This assessment is based upon an extensive monitoring campaign that provided measurements of 137Cs in more than 120,000 samples of milk and in more than 100,000 persons; such measurements were made in approximately 4,500 locations. Two approaches were used for the dose assessment. In the first approach a so-called reference dose is estimated for each settlement on the basis of measured 137Cs concentration in milk, determination of the milk equivalent of diet, and consumption rates; a further assumption is that a high fraction of the food consumed is produced locally. The reference dose is used as the official dose estimate, which is the basis for any decision on possible financial compensation and economic privileges. In a second step, the so-called real age-dependent dose is estimated from the results of whole body counter measurements and the kinetics of radiocesium in the human body. Real doses above 0.5, 5, and 50 mSv were received by about 40%, 10%, and 0.2%, respectively, of the considered population. With the exception of 1986, for which the monitoring results were limited, the real individual doses derived from whole-body counting are consistently lower than the reference doses. However, this difference declined from a factor of 3-4 in 1987-1989 to a factor of approximately 1.5 in the mid 1990's. The difference between reference and real doses is attributed to the effectiveness of countermeasures implemented after the accident. The effectiveness of these countermeasures decreased with time due to increasing economic problems in Ukraine. The collective reference and real doses of the rural population due to the intake of 134Cs and 137Cs are estimated to be 13,300 and 5,300 person-Sv, respectively. Thus, about 8,000 person-Sv is estimated to have been averted by countermeasures.


Subject(s)
Body Burden , Cesium Radioisotopes , Food Contamination, Radioactive , Milk/chemistry , Radioactive Hazard Release , Rural Population , Age Factors , Animals , Cesium Radioisotopes/analysis , Cesium Radioisotopes/pharmacokinetics , Geography , Humans , Radiation Monitoring , Radioactive Fallout , Time Factors , Ukraine
2.
Health Phys ; 70(3): 297-317, 1996 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8609023

ABSTRACT

The Chernobyl accident, which occurred in April 1986, resulted in the atmospheric release of about 70--100 PBq of 137Cs. This paper examines the doses to the adult population of the northern part of Rovno Oblast, Ukraine, from ingestion of 137Cs. Fallout of 137Cs in these regions was lower than in other regions of Ukraine. However, the transfer of 137Cs from soil to milk in the region considered is high (up to 20 Bq L-1 per kBq m-2) and results in the predominance of internal doses compared to those from external exposure. Numerous measurements of 137Cs soil deposition, 137Cs milk contamination, and 137Cs body burden have been made in the area and form the basis of a general model of internal exposure from the ingestion of foods contaminated by 137Cs. This paper has two main purposes. The first is to develop the general phenomenological description of the process leading to internal exposure from the ingestion of 137Cs contaminated foods in the situation where different countermeasures are realized. The second is to apply the model for the adult population of the northern part of the Rovno Oblast (first report) for the limited time period of up to six years after the accident. The doses actually received by the adults are estimated to be four to eight times smaller than the doses calculated for the situation without countermeasures.


Subject(s)
Cesium Radioisotopes/adverse effects , Food Contamination, Radioactive , Radioactive Hazard Release , Adult , Animals , Body Burden , Cesium Radioisotopes/administration & dosage , Cesium Radioisotopes/analysis , Food Contamination, Radioactive/analysis , Humans , Milk/adverse effects , Milk/chemistry , Models, Biological , Radiation Dosage , Radiation Injuries/prevention & control , Radiation Monitoring , Radiation Protection , Soil Pollutants, Radioactive/adverse effects , Soil Pollutants, Radioactive/analysis , Time Factors , Ukraine
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