FALLOUT CONTAMINATION OF FOOD AND WATER

Protection of the civilian population in wartime from external exposure to gamma radiation has received much more attention than protection against contamination in food and water.

External exposure is far

more dangerous not only in early effects -- lethality and acute radiation
sickness -- but probably in the longer-term effects -- reduction of life
expectancy, increased malignancies, and genetic consequences.
During a nuclear war, early deaths due to the ingestion of contaminated food and water are highly improbable.

The effects to be expected

if fallout radionuclides gain entry to the body, are of the type that would
be seen years afterward.

Most of the external gamma radiation expo-

sure would occur ina short period -- during hours to days after the
attack, while the internal exposures could occur over a prolonged period
~- in the case of strontium-90, years to perhaps a few decades.
iodine is the exception.

Radio-

Because of the short half-life of the important

iodine isotopes (about 8 days for 3} the radioiodine exposure would
occur in the first days to weeks,

might not be seen for years.

Results of the exposure, however,

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