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food have been established upon the assumption that something less than a dose that produces no apparent damage is
an acceptable risk.

For example,

produces no apparent damage,
acceptable risk.

if X amount of radiation

then 1/10 of X should be an

Maximum permissible dose is defined by

the International Commission on Radiological Protection as

"that dose accumulated over a long period of time or
resulting from a single exposure,

which in light of present

knowledge carries a negligible probability of severe somatic

or genetic injury."
The standards for body burden and for the concentration of radioisotopes in air,

water and food that are

used in this country are based upon recommendations made
by the National Committee on Radiation Protection and
Measurement and include recommendations by the International
Commission on Radiological Protection,

al Committee works closely.

with whom the Nation-

The recommendations have been

published by the National Bureau of Standards,

first in

1953 as Handbook 52 and later, in a revised and more complete version,

Handbook 69 is,

in 1959 as Handbook 69.

The title of

"Maximum Permissible Body Burdens and

Maximum Permissible

Concentrations of Radionuclides

in Air

Select target paragraph3