eat TH ee BP ™ Tete ee Hospital, set up his slit lamp along with other equipment for eye examinations. Dr. Lowrey was experienced in native eye prob. lems and.on this trip he conducted special studies on the lens for the detection of radiation cataracts. The schedule called for examinations on about 15 children and 8 adults a day. However, not all the natives could come to the village and a numberof very old or crippled individuals had to have “home”visits. Since there were no vehicles, and for that matter no roads on Rongelap, some afternoons baa The company-type tent used for sleeping quarters on Rongelap. were spent in hiking to isolated huts to ex- amine older people. Other expeditions were carried out by traveling in.a very small boat powered by fixed up as pediatric and adult medical an outboard motor on loan from the Trust units. Ezra Riklow and another native prac- Territory. Dr. Ezra, Dr. Hitching and mytitioner obtained the histories and acted as self set off to visit one old lady, said to be 101 years old. She lived at the extreme end interpreters. Dr. Alfred Hitching, a Gilberof the island about 5 miles from the village. tese, had joined us on Majuro where he was stationed, working for the Trust Ter- We carefully wrapped our medical and laritory. He was a very intelligent fellow, and boratory supplies in a plastic-covered box the first native physician to join a survey and set out down the lagoon. Before we could get the boat fairly launched a large as a memberof the medical team. wave swamped us, and we had to bail out EXAMINATIONS ON RONGELAP the boat and rescue our plastic-covered box On Rongelap the schedule called for the of equipment. Since we wore only shirts, examination of about 240 Marshallese, in- cluding exposed adults and children, children born to exposed parents and a comparison poplation of unexposed natives who had returned to Rongelap after 1957. After a preliminary interview. each person was given a check sheet and routed through ei- ther the pediatric or adult medical unit. Dr. Hitching and I each had a cubicle, and we carried out the examinations, writing up our findings as we finished each case. Records of prior examinations were available and the results were compared and any new abnormalities noted. The laboratory was established in the rear half of the dispensary hut. a hot and uncomfortable situation. The variety and large numbers of laboratory tests posed special problems for Dr. Leo Meyer, pathologist and chief of the laboratory, and a veteran of nearly all the prior medical surveys. Occupying the front half of the dispensary hut, Colonel Austin Lowrey, our opthalmologist from Walter Reed November, 1962 shorts and sneakers, no great harm was done, and we started out again, rather wet but undismayed. This time we managed to get off shore and following a rather “roller coaster” type trip, we made our destination safely. The very old, toothless lady lived under her hut, and we crawled in under to examine her and obtain the laboratory specimens. The flies, always a nuisance, were thicker than usual, but things became even more complicated and crowded with the arrival of a variety of scratching chickens followed by several small curious pigs. ENIAETOK The trip back was comparatively dry and uneventful since the wind had calmed down during the morning. Several days later a larger expedition consisting of Dr. Ezra, Hitching, Bob Conard, Austin Lowrey, Bill Scott and myself set out in a dory-like boat to visit the small islet of Eniaetok, where there were some 14 elderly Marshallese, a 31

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