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Invited Paper

Individual Doses to the Public after the Fukushima Nuclear Accident

원문정보

Tetsuo Ishikawa

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초록

영어

Background: International organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) reported public exposure doses due to radionuclides released in the Fukushima nuclear accident a few years after the event. However, the reported doses were generally overestimated due to conservative assumptions such as a longer stay in deliberate areas designated for evacuation than the actual stay. After these reports had been published, more realistic dose values were reported by Japanese scientists. Materials and Methods: The present paper reviews those reports, including the most recently published articles; and summarizes estimated effective doses (external and internal) and issues related to their estimation. Results and Discussion: External dose estimation can be categorized as taking two approaches— estimation from ambient dose rate and peoples’ behavior patterns—and measurements using personal dosimeters. The former approach was useful for estimating external doses in an early stage after the accident. The first 4-month doses were less than 2 mSv for most (94%) study subjects. Later on, individual doses came to be monitored by personal dosimeter measurements. On the basis of these measurements, the estimated median annual external dose was reported to be < 1 mSv in 2011 for 22 municipalities of Fukushima Prefecture. Internal dose estimation also can be categorized as taking two approaches: estimation from whole-body counting and estimation from monitoring of environmental samples such as radioactivity concentrations in food and drinking water. According to results by the former approach, committed effective dose due to 134Cs and 137Cs could be less than 0.1 mSv for most residents including those from evacuated areas. Conclusion: Realistic doses estimated by Japanese scientists indicated that the doses reported by WHO and UNSCEAR were generally overestimated. Average values for the first-year effective doses for residents in two affected areas (Namie Town and Iitate Village) were not likely to reach 10 mSv, the lower end of the doses estimated by WHO.

목차

ABSTRACT
Introduction
Methods for External Dose Estimation
Estimation from Ambient Dose Rate
1. Dose Assessment using Actual Behavior Records
2. Dose Assessment using Typical Behavior Patterns
3. Issues Related to Dose Assessment from Ambient Dose Rate
Estimation from Personal Dosimeters
1. Integrating-Type Personal Dosimeters
2. D-Shuttle
3. Issues Related to Personal Dosimeter Measurements
Methods for Internal Dose Estimation
1. Estimation by Whole-Body Counting
2. Estimation from Environmental Monitoring Data
3. Issues Related to Internal Dose Assessment
Overview of Doses
1. Comparison of Different Methodologies for Dose Estimation
2. Doses Estimated by the Most Reliable Methodology
3. Future Tasks for Effective Dose Estimation
References

저자정보

  • Tetsuo Ishikawa Radiation Medical Science Center for the Fukushima Health Management Survey, Fukushima Medical University, Fukushima, Japan

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자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

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