16 . USE OF A PORTABLE WHOLE-BODY COUNTER y-spectra on 227 people. Details of the exposure and findings of these medical studies have been reported.(4—7) In February 1961, another survey was conducted. At that time the portable shield was used in conjunction with an improved detection and data-recording apparatus. The y-ray spectra of 110 Marshallese people were obtained. Half of the people measured had been exposed to the fallout in 1954; the other half of the group were people (most of whom wererelated by blood) who had been living under the identical conditions of the exposed groupfor the past four years, but who had notbeen involved in the original accident. This report describes our experience during the 1961 survey of the Marshall Islanders using the portable whole-body counter, with details on the measurements made, the methods used, and the automatic data-handling techniques devel- oped for recording and analyzing the large amountof data associated with such a project. METHOD Shielding was provided by a 21 ton room with walls constructed of laminated } in. thick steel panels bolted together, which can be disassembled. The inside dimensions of the room are 5 ft x 5ft x 6ft high. In 1959 the room was mounted on a 25 ton trailer and positioned with a tractor on the tank deck of a U.S. Navy LST (Fig. 1). In 1961 the room was set up in the cargo hold of a civilian cargo ship (Fig. 2). Along with the steel room, an air-conditioned prefabricated wooden room 7 ft x 8 ft x 10 ft was set up to house the pulse-height analyzer and other electronic equipment (Fig. 1). The air-conditioning and dehumidification were of considerable value in maintaining thestability of the instrumentin the tropical climate. The subjects were ferried out to the ship for the counting. Prior to being counted, the subjects showered and donned paper coveralls and slippers. This procedure was necessary in order to minimize the possibility of counting external contamination from the island environment on their bodies and clothing. The subjects were seated on a folded hospital cot and placed in a standard, fixed position under the detector (see Fig. 3). A Marshallese subject is seen leaving the counting room through the pneumatically-driven sliding door (Fig. 4). The counting geometry employed in the portable counter is identical to that used in the permanentwhole-body counter at BNL, making possible the cross calibration of the two units.‘ The efficiency and precision of the portable counter for the various isotopes are presented in Table 1. The values obtained are very similar to those of the whole-body counter at BNL. The background observed in the Marshal Islands counting room in the range 100 keV to 2 meV was 1796 cpm, a value somewhathigher than the average background level observed at BNL (1400 cpm). The increased background count in the Marshall Islands waschiefly in the very low energy range and probably can be explained in terms of the thinner shielding in the portable counter, and the omission of Pb lining for the ceiling of the counting room. To some extent the thinner shielding was com- pensated for by the shielding provided by the water under and aroundtheship. Since, in previous years, difficulties were experienced in identifying small photopeaks of various isotopes deposited in the Marshallese in the presence of relatively large amounts of Cs!8? and Zn®, the counting time was increased for a number of subjects over that used in previous years. In addition, a larger crystal detector was substituted for the 5 in. detector formerly used. The majority of the subjects was counted for 10min; a large number was counted for 30 min. An 8in. x 4in. NaI (T1) crystal (Harshaw) detector was used. The detector was placed above the patient at a distance of 19 in. (see Fig. 3). Pulses from three 3 in. photomultiplier tubes were fed into a Nuclear Data 256channel transistorized pulse-height analyzer (Model 100). The analyzer fed the data directly to an IBM typewriter and simultaneously to a Tally paper punch unit, Model 420. Provision is made in this analyzer for transferring spectra recorded on papertapesinto the memory of the analyzer so that calibration spectra can be compared with the incoming data whenitis so desired. The data recorded on the punched paper tapes were transferred to IBM cards and thence to the magnetic tape of a 704 computer. The task of “spectral stripping” was carried out on

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