Table 5

Mortality, 1954-1969, by Age as of 1954
Group

Age:

<10

Rongelap (175 rads)

0/19*

Unexposed**

0/56

Ailingnae (69 rads)
Utirik (14 rads) —

0/6
1/56

11-20

21-30

1/13

0/10

2/7

1/28

0/30

4/21

0/1
0/20

31-40

41-50

0/1
3/15

1/1
5/18

51-60
3/5

0/1
9/13

3/17

61-70

71-80

>80

Total

t/1

3/3

1/1:

11/64

1/1

1/1

3/3
8/11

4/17

_—
3/4

—
—

5/18—
30/157

16/189

*Mortality/number in group.

**This group was not examined until 1957 and includes occasional new subjects examined through 1966 (Subject 1511).
Table 6
Adult Mortality

Exposed
Subject

Year

Age

No.

& sex

24
38

46M
78M

30

60F

1962
1962

26
56

21M
75F

1963

57

1956
1957

1958
1959

31*
62

1962

46

1962

1963

52

1964
1965

43*
28*

Heart disease
Heart disease, diabetes

Year
1958
1959

Subject

Age

No.

& sex

857
854

65M
55 F

Cerebral thrombosis
Infection in urinary tract, diabetes

68 F

Diabetes, cancer of cervix (?)

Acute varicella
Ovarian cancer

1960
1960

933
927

84M

Heart disease

1962

953

48M

893

61F

55 F

107 F
77¥F
79F

29*
55

77M
88M

1968

59*

58F

13

Probable cause

35M
60 F

1966
1966
1966

Unexpased

71F

Cancerof cervix*"

1960

861

Accident
Accident

1962
1963

“Old age” (?)

1964

862

Asthma,heart failure
Heart disease

1967
1967

967
936

Influenza~pneumonia

1968

Poliomyelitis, bulbar

Pneumonia,heart disease
Heart disease
Cancerof uterus**

1964

1964
1966
1967

848
886

56M
65M

41F
54M_

91M

894
964

68 F
90 M_

853

62M

860

24M
76F
78M

Probable cause

Pneumonia, secondary to influenza
Pneumonia,secondary to influenza
Status asthmaticus

Neurosyphilis (?)
Asthma (?)
Dhiabetes

Heart disease

Pneumonia
Probably cardiovascular (?)

Accident
Infection complicating diabetes
Diabetes

Congestive heart failure

*Ailingnae group.

**Not confirmed by autopsy or biopsy.

to the United States for extensive thyroid studies
at Brookhaven National Laboratory and later
surgery in Boston. In 1969 five further cases were
brought over for thyroid studies and surgery in
Cleveland.
The deaths during the past 3 years are included
in Tables 5 and 6. Three exposed people died. The
98-year-old woman (#59) referred to above, who
died of pneumonia complicating influenza, had
had a partial thyroidectomyfor benign thyroid
adenomathe previous year. Another death, that
of a 71-year-old woman (#13), was thoughtto be

fe

Qt

oh

rvey.

due to cancer
Whe uterus, and an 88-year-old
man (#55) dietcardiovascular disease with
heart failure. Among the unexposed population
three older men died, one with diabetes (#853),

owl
i} £ i.) *r

one with heart failure (#860) and one from unknown cause ( #964). An older woman ( #936)
died of complications of diabetes. A 24-year-old
male (#967) died in an auto accident. The boy
mentioned above died of complications of influenza. During the past 15 years, 16 deaths have
occurred among the exposed Rongelap people.
This represents 13.0 deaths per 1000 persons per
annum comparedwith 8.3 per 1000 for the Marshall Islands as a whole (1960).
Table 7 lists the births and miscarriages during
the last 3 years for both populations. The 33 births
during the 3-year period in the exposed group,
compared with 30 in the unexposed group,are in
line with the birth rate in previous years and show
no impairmentoffertility in the exposed women.

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