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MEDICAL WELFARE CENTER
The Committee was told that of those who take the annual general

examination about 30 percent need further examination.

In the Nishiyama

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District (which was the only one to receive fallout) some 320 of the 832

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survivors there are recognized by the government as having been affected.

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The kinds of illnesses found include leukemia and tiyroid cancer.

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Committee was told that, in general, the examinations did not bother the
people, except perhaps for the younger generation.

ATOMIC BOMB CASUALTY COMMISSION
The Committee met Dr. Sadihisa Kawamoto of the Department of Medicine,
in place of the Director, Dr. Ngai, who was ill.

He said that their exami-

nation group is about 6,000 (of the 20,000 total) and that they examine about
4,000 people per year.

All 200 of their employees are Japanese.

He talked

briefly about findings in the Nishiyama area and said that about 80 persons
have been estimated to have received 30 rads during their life-span and
that these are in the highest exposure group.
Dr. Kawamoto said he felt it very important to continue pediatric studies,

He also stressed that the ABCC takes

great pains to note the X-ray history of persons examined, since that might

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be a factor in the occurrence of disease later,

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cases for leukemia and thyroid cancer.

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He said that he thought a once-a-year examination was sufficient in screening

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He said that the leukemia rate in Nagasaki was much higher for exposed persons.

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since it is hard to tell whether leukemia is induced by radiation or not.

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