Next I tabulate the total number of exposed Utah infants, and compute the average dose for all of then (Table 2). The yearly births were derived from the U.S. Census (1960 and 1950). The average birth time was taken as mid-year, followed by an average delay of about six months before appreciable consumption of fresh cow's milk. Thus, exposures were regarded as beginning at the start of the calendar year immediately following the year of birth. Only the dose during infancy has been computed. However, dose calculations can easily be extended throughout childhood using the method shown in Table 2 and correcting for the increasing mass of the thyroid with age.* Table 2 INFANT EXPOSURES BY YEAR OF BIRTH YEAR BIRTH OF DURING YEAR 0.5 tol.5 1962 1961 1960 26,000 25,000 0.6 - 0.8 BIRTH Age” AV. THYROID DOSE (RADS) _ Age” ~ 1.5 to 2.5 TOTAL ~ _ DOSE 0.6 - 0.8 0.6 - 0.8 0.6 - 0.8 1959 1958 1957 24,000 1956 23,000 1955 22,000 1954 22,000 21,000 1953 1952 21,000 1951 20,000 1950 20,000 1949 19,000 TOTAL = 243,000 0.2 1.3 0.2 - 20 2 -12 3 -18 0.04 4 0.2 1.3 0.2 - 20 2 -12 3 -18 0.04 4 AVERAGE DOSE = 0.2 1.5 1.3 0.2 - 20 0.2 - 20 2 -12 5 = 30 3 - 22 0.04 4 1.3 - 10 * The enlargement of the thyroid gland with age reduces its iodine 141 concentration and the resulting radiati on dose from a given intake of iodine 131. For example, the intake of one microcurie (1,000,000 picocuries) of iodine 131 gives a seventeen-rad dose to the two-gram thyroid of a one-year old infant, a 6.8-rad dose to the eight-rad thyroid of an eight-year old child, and a i.7-rad dose to the 20-grar thyroid of an adult. Furthermore, tne weight of evidence incidates that the radiation resistance of the thyroid increases with age 3 ? although tne exact sequence of changes in sensitivity has not yet been established precisely. DOE ARCHIVES 4x

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