this kind we need large numbers over long periods of time, large
populations over long periods of time, in order to develop an understanding
There is
of the likelihood that this will change as a result of radiation.
no way that in the short time that we have been operating that ship and in
the small population we are working with, we could improve upon the
averages that we are now using.
Buck:
May I please say something that you said in the last sentence, which
was there was no way of knowing how many deaths from cancer there have
been, have died.
I failed to translate that.
[Alice continued
presentation in Marshallese.]
Marshallese:
You have been examining the Narshallese
period of 28 years, I believe.
population for a
Isn’t that a long enough time to make some
kind of assumptions?
~:
We have been examining a very limited population of Marshallese
people for that period of time and they were people who were exposed to
very large doses, relative to these they were very large doses.
We have a
pretty good understanding of the results of that kind of exposure.
But
here we are talking about very much lower doses over a long period of time.
There we were talking about a high dose over a short period of time and
they are not comparable.
Marshallese:
This paper seems to indicate that the contamination of Mejit
ex~eeds that of Utrik, and so isn’t that enough for the Americans, the U.S.
government, to say, to actually announce that Mejit has more contamination?
They are making compensation to the Utrik population, but not to the Mejit.
Robison:
way.
Letme
If, ifwe
try, let me try to do this, to explain why it looks this
look at the radiation in the soil and in the plants at
Mejit it’s less than at Utrik.
But the Brookhaven people have two
different diets, and Brookhaven has told us that they believe that over on