NHK, Aug. 20, 2013 (Transcript): Health professionals in
Northern Japan are suspicious about a trend they’re seeing after the nuclear
accident there two years ago. The normal incidence rate is thyroid cancer in
children is one in hundreds of thousands […] Health professionals had tested
210,000 children by the end of July. On top of the 18 minors they diagnosed [with
thyroid cancer], they suspect 25 others may have the illness. Members of the
panel say they can’t determine if the accident has affected the rate of cancer
among children. They’ve decided to set up the team experts to look into the
situation [...]
Le Temps (Switzerland); Summarized translation by Worldcrunch, Aug. 21, 2013: The nuclear accident of Fukushima is already leading to a surge in the number of cases of thyroid cancer, according to research being presented this week in Switzerland by Japanese scientist Toshihide Tsuda. [...] annual incidence of thyroid cancer among those 18-years-old and younger in the Fukushima area to be 157 per one million, more than 31 times superior to the national average of five per million. [... A] stronger and faster evolution than that after the Chernobyl [...] and, Tsuda believes, are only the first signs of a wider health catastrophe. [...]
4-month old article in the Mainichi Daily News featuring Toshihide Tsuda, April 22, 2013: Professor Toshihide Tsuda of Okayama University, an expert on pollution investigations, says, “Although we cannot say anything for certain based on numbers from a single round of tests, this is important information for looking into the causal relationships between the spread of radioactive material (iodine-131) and the incidence of thyroid gland cancer. The regular release of information is necessary for keeping tabs on health changes.”
View the latest thyroid data: Twelfth Prefectural Oversight Committee Meeting: Thyroid Ultrasound Examination Results
Watch NHK’s broadcast here
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