The recommendations are based on the conservative assumption of

a nonthreshold linear relationship between radiological dose and the health
effect. The assumption of no threshold means that any nonzero dose
yields a nonzero effect detrimental to health. Evaluation of risks using
this assumption probably results in overestimates of risks.

Values for annual dose limits in various situations are jlisted in
Table 5-2. These limits represent the recommendations of the FRC.
For application to the Enewetak Atoll, the United States Atomic Energy
Commission Task Group Report recommends that the values needed to

evaluate cleanup alternatives should be the FRC guides, reduced by 50
percent for annual doses to individuals, and by 20 percent for the 30-year
gonadal doses, because of uncertainties in field measurements. These
values are shown in Table 5-3. These reductions in the average population
dose are made because of the uncertainty concerning dose estimates which
depend greatly on the foods that the people will choose to eat and the way
they will choose to live. In addition, these recommendations follow the
general guidance of the FRC to provide allowances for exposures from
beneficial nonmedical uses of radioactive materials.
5.4 LIMITING AND CONTROLLING HAZARDS
The methods examined for limiting radiological hazards on Enewetak
Atoll are: (1) the control of the diet of the Enewetak people and, by
implication, their agricultural and food gathering practices; (2) the control
of residence of the population throughout the islands of the atoll; and (3)
the cleanup of radioactive materials.
5.4.1

Control! of Diet and Food Sources

: §.4.1.1

Internal Dose and Food Source.

Radiocontaminants in foods

come directly from the soil in which food plants are growing. Radiological
gyrveys of Enewetak Atoll have found evidence of uptake of 37Cs and
Sr, among other radionuclides, in both edible and inedible plants.
Indigenous plants used for food that incorporate radionuclides from the
soil include coconuts, pandanus, breadfruit, and arrowroot.

Human

internal radiation exposure is directly related to the amount of fruit of
these plants ingested by the individual. The surveys also report radionuclides in the flesh and organs of indigenous fauna, such as terns, rats
and land crabs. Internal doses will increase as a result of eating flesh
from local birds and crabs, or from domestic animals such as poultry
and swine, which have foraged on radioactive plants. Consequently, an
effective dose reduction procedure would be simply to restrict the
islanders' use of these foods. Lacking such controls, the penalty would
be the accumulation of large radioactive doses for the individual utilizing
such food sources.

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