Three Mile Island:
A troubling new report
ION Science 03/10/97
Exposure to radiation shortly after the 1979 nuclear accident at
Three Mile Island in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, may have indeed
increased cancer among populations downwind of the plant, scientists
at the University of North Carolina report, contrary to a previous
study.
Dr. Steven Wing, associate professor of epidemiology, led a study
of cancer cases within 10 miles of the nuclear power plant from 1975
to 1985. He and colleagues conclude that following the accident, lung
cancer and leukemia rates were two to 10 times higher downwind of the
Three Mile Island reactor than upwind. A paper Wing and colleagues
wrote appears in the journal Environmental Health
Perspectives.
The new study involved re-analyzing data from a 1990 Columbia
University study that concluded the nation's worst civilian nuclear
accident was not responsible for slightly increased cancer rates near
the plant because radiation exposures were too low.
"I would be the first to say that our study doesn't prove by
itself that there were high-level radiation exposures, but it is part
of a body of evidence that is consistent with high exposures," Wing
said. "The cancer findings, along with studies of animals, plants and
chromosomal damage in Three Mile Island area residents, all point to
much higher radiation levels than were previously reported. If you
say that there was no high radiation, then you are left with higher
cancer rates downwind of the plume that are otherwise unexplainable."
Limitations of the new study, like the earlier work, include the
continuing difficulty of determining precise wind direction for
several days following the accident.
A particularly troubling aspect of the continuing investigation of
long-term effects of the disaster revolve around U.S. District Court
Judge Sylvia Rambo, who dismissed more than 2,000 damage claims filed
against the power plant by nearby residents last year citing a
"paucity of proof" to support their cases: What were the judge's
exclusion criteria and what qualified her to decide what these
criteria should be?
This case and several other nationally prominent trials in the
recent past have begun an important public debate as scientific
evidence introduced in courtrooms becomes increasingly complex, and
the quality of science education in the U.S. continues to fall. Can
non-scientist judges and jury members reliably interpret complex
matters of scientific evidence, assess the qualifications of "expert"
scientific witnesses who may be paid handsomely for their testimony,
and sort science opinion from science fact? Can lawyers?
--From ION Science news service
Three Mile Island Alert, 4100 Hillsdale Rd, Harrisburg PA 17112 ~~ 717-541-1101 ~~ tmia@tmia.com
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