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Chornobyl Health Impact
By Alex Kuzma, Children of Chornobyl Relief Fund
On April 26, 1986, at 1:23 a.m., reactor number 4 at the
Chornobyl Atomic Energy Station exploded. Subsequent investigations revealed
that tests that were being conducted on the operating and backup systems
were mismanaged. The plant was immediately shut down. Nonetheless, a large
amount of radioactive steam was released into the atmosphere during the
explosion. The highest amount of radioactive fallout was registered in
the vicinity immediately surrounding Chornobyl. The atomic energy station
and the nearby town of Prypiat are located in northern Ukraine, 90 kilometers
north of Kyiv (Kiev), the capital of Ukraine, a city with a population
of 2.8 million. At the time, the prevailing winds were directed north
to northwest, so that Belarus received the most widespread deposit of
radioactive fallout. With subsequent shifts in the direction of the wind,
as well as rainfall, northern regions of Ukraine, as well as the southern
border of European Russia received radioactive fallout. Soviet authorities
neither officially acknowledged the explosion, nor warned their citizens
until May 2, 1986.
- Excessive levels of radiation recorded in northern Scandinavia,
Wales, Ireland, Northern Italy, Greece, coastal Alaska in the first
weeks after the explosion
- As a result of prevailing winds and rains, heaviest
radioactive fallout on southern and central Belarus, northern Ukraine
- In Ukraine, over 4.6 million hectares contaminated,
some of the most productive agricultural land in the world
- Total amount of radiation released as a result of the
explosion at Chornobyl was originally reported as 50 million curies
by Soviet authorities. During the past decade, subsequent research in
Europe and North America and new calculations have resulted in revised
estimated of up to 260 million curies. (Source: MIT research study completed
by Dr. Alexander Sich, released January 1994; research supervised by
former Nuclear Regulatory Commissioner, Dr. Norman Rasmussen)
- To date, approximately , residents have been permanently
evacuated from contaminated regions immediately surrounding the power
station; 116,000 of these were evacuated shortly after the explosion
- 600,000 soldiers, firemen, and clean-up workers (men
and women) were sent to the disaster site during the radiation emergency
in the months after the explosion
- Liquidators (cleanup workers) live in Belarus, Russia,
Kazakhstan, and more than 350,000 liquidators live in Ukraine (Source:
International Union "Chornobyl")
- During the past decade, approximately 40,000 clean up
workers have died, mostly men in their '30s and '40s; US death toll
in Vietnam after 12 years of involvement was approximately 50,000 (Source:
International Union "Chornobyl")
- A permanent 30 kilometer "dead-zone" was established
around the power station where human habitation is forbidden
- 1.2 million people continue to live on lands contaminated
by "low-level" radiation, outside the 30 kilometer zone; approximately
1,800 villages affected
- Gradual seepage of radiation into water table, especially
the Dnipro River and its tributaries, threatens water supply for millions
of people in coming decades
- Total number of evacuees and cleanup workers (those exposed
to the most intense levels of radiation) was close to three-quarters
of a million people
- Shortly after the explosion, thousands of children and
adults in Ukraine and Belarus were stricken with acute radiation sickness;
symptoms included vomiting, hair loss, severe rashes; contradicts original
official public estimates of 100 people (Source: declassified Soviet
Politburo Protocols published in Izvestiya, May 1992)
- The World Health Organization reported that thyroid cancer
among children living near Chornobyl rose to levels 80 times higher
than normal; (Source: Wall Street Journal, September 3, 1992, and Nature,
September, 1992)
- Experts from the University of Hiroshima analyzed data
on newborns and 30,000 stillborn fetuses in Belarus; researchers concluded
that birth defects have nearly doubled since 1986 (UPI wire report July
14, 1994)
- More than 10,000 Ukrainian children have been to Cuba
for treatment of leukemia and other illnesses (New York Times October
6, 1995)
- Overall, oncological illnesses among children in Ukraine
have tripled since 1986 (Ministry of Health of Ukraine report, Winter
1994)
- A joint Israeli-Ukrainian study published in the Royal
Society of Medicine in London in 2001 found that the children of Chornobyl
liquidators born after the 1986 disaster have a rate of chromosome damage
seven times higher than their siblings born prior to the nuclear accident.
- The UN Office on Population reported that in 1994, the
only two nations in Europe with negative population growth: Ukraine
and Belarus. The report attributed this decline in part to increased
infant mortality and adverse health conditions stemming from the Chornobyl
disaster. Infant mortality in Ukraine stands at twice the European average
(14 per 1,000 live births)
- Among males in Russia, life expectancy has dropped precipitously
since 1986; Chornobyl suspected as a factor (Source: New York Times
September 1, 1995)
- "Chornobyl has fueled a massive infertility crisis
in Ukraine" according to the Boston Globe of January 26, 1996.
Fifty percent of all men between the ages of 13 and 29 have fertility
problems - the highest rate of infertility ion the world
- According to radiation health experts working for the
National Academy of Sciences most cancers that result from radiation
exposure do not develop until 10-20 years after exposure. The highest
incidence of cancer is expected to occur over the next 5-10 years and
therefore no accurate assessment of Chornobyl's overall impact can be
made until this period has expired. (United States National Academy
of Sciences, BEIR-5 Report)
NOTE: For the above information, if a source is not provided,
then the information can be confirmed with the Ministries of Health of
Chornobyl or of Environment Protection and Nuclear Safety of Ukraine.
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