Rongelap. Duringthat year the health aide was visited frequently-~femaxpper respiratory intections (nearly everyone had at least one cold during the vear). Gastroenteritis was also a frequent complaint. group are compared with those in the unexposed group in Tables 3 and 4. Since anv radiation-induced genetic imperfections that might result in nonviable offspring might be present in the germ plasm of the father as well as the mother, two un- exposed women mated to exposed men are in- cluded in the exposed group. Four children born in 1954 were excluded from the list because thev had been conceived before the accident. Table 3 and Figure [0 showthe vearly inci- “REVIEW OF DATA ON MORTALITY AND PREGNANCY TERMINATION OVER THE PAST SIX YEARS dence oflive births and miscarriages and the sex Mortality The four deaths that have occurred in the ex- posed Rongelap people during the past 6 vears give an annual rate of 8.1 per 1000 population. The Marshall Islands annual rate is reported as 6.8 per 1000. The unexposed Rongelap popula- tion has had four deaths also, which gives a rate of 8.3 per 1000. These figures do not include fetal and infant mortality. The people of Utirik Island, who received about 14 r of radiation in the 1954 accident, have shown death rate of about 10tol! _ per 1000 population. Their population has varied between 160 and 213 people since the event. Pregnancy Terminations of babies born of women of child-bearing age in the exposed and unexposed groups. Under the category of miscarriages are included stillbirths and babies dying a few hoursafter birth. It was unfortunate that in most cases it was not possible for physicians toinspect the products of miscarriage. Figure 10, a plot of the percentage incidence of miscarriage in the two groups, indicates that it is somewhat greater in the exposed group. The data on pregnancy terminations, summarized in Table 4+, also show an increased incidence of mis- carriage in the exposed group. ° The birth rate in the Marshall Islands in 1937 was 37.3 per 1000 population. The 24 live births ported for each of these years in the unexposed women. Pregnancy terminations in the exposed \ ---+ EXPOSED UNEXPOSED Table 4 70 PERCENT Rongelap Exposed (1954-1959) and Rongelap Unexposed (1956-1959) Fo Exposed Women giving birth to living children Women with miscarriages* but no live births Women with no recorded pregnancies Women with | or more miscarriages - Women with 2 or more miscarriages Pregnancies terminating in miscarriages \ 60 + \ JS % Unexposed 6+ 66 18 ei 18 a 22 ~ 41 28 l4 11 35 23 *Includes children dyingfirst few hours after birth. {185561 MISC / TOTAL: PREGNANCIES qT @ o \ Summaryof Pregnancy Termination Data, _ reported in this group for 1959. Only one was re- \ wf y 2/8 op | | During 1958 six miscarriages and stillbirths were recordedin the exposed group, but none was 278 05 | | 9954 t EXPOSURE 55 56 37 58 39 60 YEAR Figure 10. Incidence of miscarriages and stillbirths in exposed Rongelap women. Stillbirths include babies living only a few hours after birth. Data on unexposed women are incomplete prior to 1956.

Select target paragraph3