C.W. Mays troduction - 3 iodine 131 doses again come out high. 1963 hearings, At the time of the the Public Health service announced the initiation of a survey in which all children, in a restricted area of Utah would be examined for thyroid abnormalities which might have been caused through exposure to iodine 131. This survey is now in progress; it is the particular purpose of Dr. Mays' article to point out that far more than the present restricted sample needs to be examined, since, with a much larger population at risk, many more cases might be uncovered, Currently, about 3400 children have been examined and amongst these no malignancies have been found. Twelve cases of thyroiditis werecfound, but these could well have arisen from many other causes. If all of the 250 thousand children in Utah are included in the study the effects of the radiation might be detectable, and an important contribution would be made to our knowledge of the relation between radiation and its effects. sven the absence of any detectable thyroid cancer would be a valuable scientific result in allowing us to describe more accurately the relation between small radiation doses and their effects. The earlier aspects of this topic have been covered in S/C in many articles: august 1963 (Vol.5 No. 9) contained a summary of the testimony presented by Dr. Eric Reiss on behalf of CNI to the Congressional Hearings; November 19643 (Vol.6 No.1) contained further testimony from the Hearings as well as an exchange between CNI and Dr. Gordon M. Dunning of the AEC. Readers of S/C were kept up-to-date by articles in the September and November 1965 issues, in articles by G.D. Carlyle Thompson (State Director of Public Health in Utah) and Virginia Brodine and Dr. Walter Bauer (of CNI). Since then, there have been a few relevant publications Two papers in Nature 1,2 have dealth with fractionation of DOE ARCHIVES 3Ff

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