—

.
●

.

✎

S..

.—

.

.. . .

.

.

. . .. ...
.
. .. . . . .

.

.. .
.. .

409995
Office of the Ass$stant Secretary
Territorial & International Affairs
Interior Department
August 1, 1980
-.

&

-.

.
Discussion Paper
Health Plan for the Marshall Islands
Meeting of August 4, 1980

-.
.

.-

“-The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the content of the health @an,
‘requiredby law to be developed by the Secretary of the Interior and
~. submitted to the Congress no later than January 1, 1981.
..
1.
The statute. The pertinent statute is Public hw 96-205,
approved March 12, 1980, which provides in section 102:
“(a) In addition to any other payments or benefits
provided by law to compensate inhabitants of the atolls
of Bikini, Enewetak, Rongelap, and Utirik, in the
Marshall Islands for radiation exposure or other losses
sustained by them as a result of the United States
nuclear weapons testing program at or near the atolls
during the period 1946 to 1958, the Secretary of the
Interior (herein after in this section referred to as
the ‘Secretary’) shall provide for the people of the
atolls of Bikini, Enewetak, Rcmgelap, and Utirik and
for the people of such other atolls as may be found to
be or to have been exposed to radiation from the
nuclear weapons testing program, a program of medical
care and treatment and environmental research and
monitoring for any injury, illness, or condition which
may be the result directly or indirectly of such
nuclear weapons testing program. The program shall be
impkmanted according to aplandevelopedby
the
Secretary in consultation with the Secretaries of
Defense, Energy, and Health, Education, and Welfare
and with the direct involvement of representatives from
the people of each of the affected atolls and from the
government of the 14arshallIslands. The plan shall set
forth, as appropriate to the situation, condition, and
needs of the individual atoll peoples:

.
r~

“(1) an integrated, comprehensive health care
program including primary, secondary, and
tertiary care with special emphasis upon the
biological effects of ionizing radiation;
“(2) a schedule for the periodic comprehensi~e
survey and analysis of the radiological status
of the atolls to and at appropriate internals,
but not less frequently than once every five
years, the development of an updated radiation
dose assessment, together with an estimate of
the risks associated with the predicted human
excnxure, for each such atoll; and

.

,..
,/ .
/“

Select target paragraph3