A TWENTY-YEAR REVIEW OF MEDICAL FINDINGS IN A MARSHALLESE POPULATION ACCIDENTALLY EXPOSED TO RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT I. Background repeated physical examinations including studies and photographsof beta burnsof the skin, made A. THE ACCIDENT numerous hematological tests, and monitored for The testing of nuclear devices in the Marshall Islands (see Hines?5), beginning with Operation Crossroads at Bikini in 1946 and ending with the moratorium in 1958, did notresuit in significant radiation exposure to personnelor fallout contamination outside the test area except in one case. On March 1, 1954, the detonation from a tower of a thermonuclear device, Bravo, in the Castle Se- ries of tests at Bikini resulted in a seriousfallout accident. The yield was about 17 megatons, considerably greater than expected, and an unpredicted shift in winds in the upper atmosphere caused the radioactive cloud to drift over and deposit fallout on several inhabited atolls to the east: Rongelap with 64 people, Ailingnae with 18 people, Rongerik with 28 American servicemen, and Utirik with 157 people (see Figure 1). A Japanese fishing vessel in the area, the Lucky Dragon, with 23 fishermen aboard was also exposed (see Appendix 3). The fallout is thought to have commenced at Rongelap about4 to 6 hrafter the detonation, at Rongerik about 7 hr after it, and at Uurik about 22 hrafter it. Its duration on theislands is uncertain but has been estimated as about 12 hr, the greater part ofthe fallout occurring early in the period.? The estimated dose of gammaradiation to the island populations is discussed in Secton IT. A. The American servicemen on Rongerik noted that the needle on a telemetering instrument suddenly beganrising and wentoff-scale in 30 min, beginning about6 to 7 hrafter the detonation. An alarm was radioedto thetask force, and a plane flying low confirmed thatsignificant fallout had occurred. The exposed people were evacuated by planes and Navyships within about two days and taken to Kwajalein, 175 miles to the south. They were first examined by the medical groupat the Naval Dispensary there. Eight days after the accident a medical team consisting of 21 doctors and technicians, largely from the Navy, which had beenrequested by the AEC, arrived at Kwajalein. For two months the team took medical histories, did external and internally absorbed radioisotopes. Complete removal of the radioactive contamination from the skin and hair required manycleansing procedures; the coconut oil used on the hair was particularly retentive. At the end ofthe ex- amination period, most of the skin burns had healed and, althoughsignificant hematologicaldepression had occurred, no serious illnesses were evident that could be related to radiation injury. The Marshallese people were taken to a tent encampment on EbeyeIsland for a stay of several weeks. Since Utirik Atoll was only very slightly contaminated from thefallout, it was considered safe for habitation, and the Utirik people were returned there with fresh supplies, clothing, andlivestock. Rongelap Atoll was too contaminatedto allow immediate return andits people (along with the 18 from Ailingnae) were taken to a temporary village built for them on Ejet Island in Majuro Atoll, where they lived for 3 years until their return to Rongelap. The American servicemen were taken to Tripler Army Hospitai for further examinations and later returned to duty. B. ANNUAL EXAMINATIONS Medical examinations of the Rongelap people were conducted at their temporary home on Majuro in September of 1954 and in Marchof 1955, 1956, and 1957. In 1954 an unexposed group of Marshallese living at Majuro was chosen as a comparison population for these examinations. This group, however, was composed of people from many of the Marshall Islands who were not easily located for subsequent examinations. Unexposed Rongelap people gradually moved to Ejet to live with their fellow islanders, and this group increased further on the return to Rongelap. These unexposed Rongelap people were includedin the examinations and have served as an excellent comparison population since they are bloodrelatives of the exposed Rongelap people, match reasonably well for age and sex, and live under the same environmentalconditions (see Section III. A.).