The Defense Nuclear Agency (DNA) is DoD's Executive Agent
for the NTPR program, which involves research and assistance
The magnitude
teams in each of the four Military Services.
of the effort is illustrated by programmed costs of about |

$6 million per year and personnel commitments of about 150

person-years per year

(Tab A).

Progress of the NTPR program to date has been significant.
Of the estimated 250,000 DoD participants in the tests,
over 145,000 have been identified by name, and preliminary

dosage information has been recovered for over 45,000.
A significant aid to our research has been information

supplied by the participants themselves.
In February 1978,
DOD established toll-free telephone lines and advertised
widely for test participants to call in, establish two-way
contact, and provide information on test participation and
current status.

To date about 30,000 have called in or

written, many of whom have supplied the names of other
participants, old copies of orders, rosters, and the like.
The research continues and currently consists of reconstructing rosters from morning reports and ships' logs, searching
medical records and other radiation dosage repositories,
and reconstructing dosages (using calculational methodologies)
for personnel for whom film badge data cannot be located.
It is estimated that the NTPR program will continue for
about two more years.
Based on current research,

it is apparent that most exposures

to DoD personnel during the tests were quite low-~-averaging
on the order of about one-half a rem.
Of course, many
received no exposure at all,

theless,

and some received more.

Never-

indications are that only a very small percentage

exceeded 5 rem per year,

the current Federal guideline for

most radiation workers.
One of the principal sources of
exposure data is the file of the Reynolds Electrical and
Engineering Company (REECo), a contractor of the Department
of Energy (DoE) (formerly the AEC), which is the official
master repository of dosage records for the atmospheric
nuclear weapons tests.
A summary of whole-body gamma radia-

tion dosages from REECo for the years 1945-1962, some 232,000
entries, is enclosed (Tab B).
While this file includes

both DoD and non-DoD personnel, our research indicates it
is quite representative of the distribution of DoD personnel
exposures alone.
Backup REECo statistics for continental
Lesting, oceanic testing,
(Tab C).

and both combined are enclosed

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