Mar 18 2011
How Radiation Poisoning Affects Women and Children
Among those most at risk in Japan in the aftermath of the nuclear reactor failures are pregnant women. Radiation exposure means that harmful rays can pass directly to a fetus through a mother’s body, dramatically increasing the risks of birth defects, cognitive disorders, and cancers. Radioactive particles carried by the wind and inhaled or ingested by a pregnant mother can reach a developing fetus through the mother’s circulatory system. In those areas where radiation levels have been recorded to be higher than the equivalent of more than 500 chest X-rays, the risks of cancer become significant. There is already speculation of the potential long-term effects of the radiation exposure to a new generation of Japanese. So far about 140,000 people have been evacuated from about a 20 mile radius of the reactors, and evacuated pregnant women are being advised to remain indoors to avoid inhaling or ingesting radioactive wind-borne particles. Much depends on how Japan responds to the crisis during these days in the immediate aftermath. There is still a social stigma in Japan against disabilities afflicting people as a result of the US bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II. Authorities fear that as in the past, parents of so-called “hibakusha” may not take advantage of any special health benefits.
GUEST: Karen Charman, Managing Editor of the Journal Capitalism Nature Socialism, and an award-winning independent investigative environmental journalist with a special interest in nuclear issues
Read her article about women and Three Mile Island here: http://www.ontheissuesmagazine.com/2011spring/2011spring_Charman.php
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