N-5
.
The sequence of safety recommendations and guides has run as follows.
(a)

In 1954 the National Bureau of Standards Handbook 59 presented

the recommendations of the NCRP.

The maximum permissible dose to the

bone marrow (and hence to the entire body) was 0.3 rem per week.
(b)

In January, 1957, the whole-body dose for the general

population was lowered to .5 rem per year by the NCRP.

This was

published as an insert into the Bureau's Handbook 59. The AEC also
published this and other recommendations in Appendix 10, p. 400 of its
22nd Semiannual Report to the Congress.
(c)

In 1960, the Federal Radiation Council defined two guides for

the general population.

(Federal Register, May 22,

1965,

pp. 6953-55)

The “radiation protection guide" for the general population under
normal circumstances was .170 rem per year.
The "protective action guide (category 3)" was defined to cover the

long-term harm by cesium-137 and strontium-90 acting through the food web
after the first year of a contaminating event.
The FRC recognized the
great diversity of such situations.
It concluded that protective action

must be determined on a case-by-case basis when the annual dose to the

bone marrow after the first year would exceed 0.5 rem to individuals or

0.2 rem to a suitable sample of the population.

{d) In 1979, ICRP Publication 30 subsequently modified for the
transuranics in Publication 48, 1986, provided annual limits for the
intake of radionuclides by workers. Divided by 30, they are equal to a
committed effective dose equivalent per year of .170 rem.

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