IN CONFIDENCE

--6~
of many of the islanders, or because the further tests would
themselves involve appreciable additional radiation, or specialized
linear scanning equipment which is not available in many centres.
On the three additional points on which the Committee requests
comment:

1.
It is inevitably difficult to assess the likelihood that
further tests, after the return of the Rongelapese and Utirikese, might
have added substantially to their radiation exposure, if only because
this assessment would depend upon the detailed planning arrangements
laid down for conducting these tests in the light of current meteorological reports, height and power of detonation, fission/fusion yield, etc.
In retrospect, however, the measurements of background radiation and
body burden of radionuclides appear to indicate that in fact the amount
of whole body radiation was little increased, probably by less than 3%
of that initially received, following the return, either from a raised
background or from subsequent tests.
The percentage increase in thyroid
radiation is likely to have been even smaller.
I have not attempted to
make any exact determination of this increase, but the above estimate
shows that the decision did not increase substantially the exposures
received.
2.
he team's general medical examinations, both of the exposed
people and of the unexposed people attending "sick call" illustrated the
value that perlodic medical examinations always have for people Living
in relatively isolated small communities in any part of the world.
Your
present practice and development of periodic medical visits to the
Marshallese and other islands is thus of obvious importance in detection
and treatment of chronic illnesses.
I was impressed however by the
Frequency of recent or "acute" illnesses or minor epidemics, the management of some of which would be beyond the facilities of Health Aides.
This point is not strictly within my remit as your consultant.
I wondered
however whether the development of simple and reliable radio links, and
appropriate arrangements for discussion when necessary between dispensaries
and nospitals in the area, might not give help which could be economically
practicable and rapidly introduced, and which would not nly allow discussion of difficult problems, but might also provide a valuable form of
continuing training and stimulus, particularly for Health Aides in the move
isolated situations.
I appreciate, however, tine problems of supplying and
Maintaining equipment, and of implementing advice that might be given hy
hospitals, and that questions of this type will certainly have been
reviewed already by your Congress.
3.
I cannot comment as an expert on the purely physical estimate of
external radiation exposure or the data from which tney are derived.
These dose estimates, however, appear to have been reliahly hased on
early and subsequent readings, on conventional calculations as to tie
decrease in fallout radioactivity with time, and on reasonable estimates
227

9010446

Select target paragraph3