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Radiation, Science, and Health
Author Index to
Papers and Documents
Dr.
Zbigniew Jaworowski
[bio]
Science Papers
Technical Articles
Conference Papers
Presentations
Correspondence |
Science Papers
Technical Articles
The Future of UNSCEAR,
by Zbigniew Jaworowski, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc.,
SCIENCE, VOL
297 19 JULY, 2002
[PDF 46KB]
The existence
of the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic
Radiation (UNSCEAR) is in danger. Dramatic decreases in funding have
virtually paralyzed its activities: This year the Committee was unable to
convene to continue its scientific work.
UNSCEAR on the Health Effects from
Chornobyl,
by Zbigniew Jaworowski, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc.,
Science, 293, Number 5530, 27 Jul 2001, pp. 605-606.
"At the time
of the accident, 134 employees of the Chornobyl
nuclear power plant and emergency workers received short-term
whole-body doses ranging from 800 to 16,000 milligrays of radiation,
28 of whom, died within the first 4 months of the
accident, due to acute radiation sickness. The fate of the 106
survivors who received doses of 1300 to 5300 milligrays has been
monitored up to the present. There have been 11 deaths among them
between 1987 and 1998. Only in three cases (one of myeloid leukemia
and two of meylodysplastic syndrome) could the death be probably
related to radiation."
The Truth About Chernobyl Is Told,
by
Zbigniew Jaworowski, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc.,
21st Century Science and Technology, Winter 2000-2001
"The recent report of the United
Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) is
in total disagreement with the opinions widely propagated by the
international media, by the Greens, and by the governments of Belarus and
Ukraine, that there have been tens of thousands of cancer deaths and
epidemics of genetic disorders, allegedly caused by the Chernobyl accident.
To the contrary, UNSCEAR states, even among the progeny of
the survivors of the atomic attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, who received
radiation doses hundreds of times higher than the radiation doses to the
inhabitants of regions contaminated by the Chernobyl accident, no
radiogenetic disturbances of health have been found."
Radiation Risk and Ethics,
by Zbigniew Jaworowski,
Prof., Sept. 1999, Physics Today.
"The established worldwide practice of
protecting people from radiation costs hundreds of billions of dollars a
year to implement and may well determine the world's future energy system.
But is it right? The global
average dose has increased by about 20% since the beginning of the 20th
century—mainly as a result of the broader application of x-ray diagnostics
in medicine. Other major sources of man-made radiation, such as nuclear
power, nuclear weapons tests, and the Chernobyl accident, have contributed
only a tiny proportion—less than 0.1%—to that increase."
Conference Papers
Ionizing Radiation and Radioactivity in the 20th Century,
2000, Zbigniew Jaworowski, Ph.D.,
Central Laboratory for Radiological Protection, Warsaw, Poland,
at the Int'l Conf on Radiation and its Role in Diagnosis and
Treatment. FICR - 2000. Tehran, Iran, Oct. 18-20, 2000.
"After ionizing radiation and
radioactivity were discovered at the end of the 19th century
their social status has oscillated between enthusiastic acceptance and
rejection. This was in concurrence with recognition of their three basic
aspects: 1) usefulness for medical applications and for technical and
scientific aims; 2) beneficial effects of their low levels; and 3) harmful
effects of high levels. In the first part of the 20th century the
acceptance prevailed, in the second the rejection. The change of the
public mood, that occurred rather abruptly after the World War II, was not
due to discovery of some new danger of radiation, but was caused by
political and social reasons, not related to real radiation effects."
Presentations
Radiation Risks in the 20th Century; Reality, Illusions
and Risks
by
Zbigniew
Jaworowski,
September 1998, in Warsaw, Poland. This is the text of the Prof.
Jaworowski's Lecture at the "Discovery of Polonium and Radium; It's
Scientific and Philosophical Consequences, Benefits and Treats for Mankind"
International Conference (100th Anniversary of the Discovery of Polonium and
Radium by Marie Sklodowska- Curie), held 17-20 September 1998 in Warsaw,
Poland. "We are all exposed to natural ionizing radiation,
which penetrates all living organisms. Radiation comes from the cosmos and
from radionuclides present in rocks, buildings, and air, and in our own
body. Each flake of snow, grain of soil, drop of rain, a flower, and even
each man in the street is a source of this radiation."
Correspondence |