The milk all of us drink— New public health problems are raised by the effects of radioactive fallout on vital evaluating the present and potential hazard and including test ye since radioactive coral fell as white ash across the decks of the Japanese fishing boat Fortunate Dragon in the spring of 1954, fallout from nuclear bombs has been making both news and history. Its involvment with man and his food supply has entangled it in issues ranging from the biological to the diplomatic. Nor have the public press, official statements, or comment from independentscientific sources unraveled the tangles. What active strontium-90 in the U.S. milk supply—is the substance of this report. It seems whoily right for a consumer testing organization to undertake to evaluate a new constituent of our food. even one not proclaimed on any label. The main sources of information on the problems of fallout have been the Atomic Energy Commission and, to a muchlesser extent, most controversial issuesofall. other Government agencies such as the United States Public Health Service and the Food and Drug Administration. Other governments and the United Nations also have pub- atmosphere after nuclear blasts pass through a number of Committee reported in 1957, “Information on fallout has fallout means to us, and what to do aboutit, still are the The radioactive materials which fall out of the upper physical, chemical and biological processes, some of which take years to occur. Each of these steps is a link in a long lished extensive data on fallout; but, as a Congressional evidently not reached the public in adequate or under- standable ways.” For at least a decade, the AEC has been studying fallout chain of events which connect the blasts to damage in people, the living and the yet unborn, even thousands of problems of all kinds—physical, chemical and biological. of these links have been well established. Our knowledge terials in air, soil, water, people, and foods—including miles away and years later. Thescientific facts about some of other important links is vague and incomplete. It re- mains necessary for us to arrive at some assessment of the hazard, even though notall the necessary evidenceis in. Every day each person in the world is exposed to and consumes some measurable debris from fallout in his food, in his drink, in the air he breathes. What this may mean to him in general—but with particular reference to radio- Some of our knowledge of the normal radioactivity of the human body has come from counting cylinders of this type, which measure rays that penetrate to the outside of a man from the decay of atoms 102 MARCH 1959 Measurements have been made of radioactive fallout ma- milk, which is the principal source of strontium-90 in the diet of Americans. The responsibility of the Public Health Service for safeguarding the health of the country has led it, too, since 1956, to study fallout materials in air and food, particularly in milk. But these studies have been mainly exploratory, to study methods and to obtain typical values; they have not explored as yet the full gamut of possible within him. The tank, heavily shielded against external radiation, contains a liquid in which the radiation manifests itself as tiny light pulses; complex electronic devices are used to count these pulses

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