This is a translation of an interview article posted online on August 30, 2014, by a Japanese freelance journalist, Hiroki Suzuki. Suzuki runs a site called, "Tami no Koe Shimbun," or "People's Voice Newspaper," where he posts interviews of various people in Fukushima. The article was translated with permissions from Suzuki and the interviewee.
Tami no Koe Shimbun (People’s Voice Newspaper)
Let’s protect children from radiation exposure. Let’s protect people. That’s why I keep writing.
“Please let me be the one to decide on my own life.” A 19-year-old Date City woman talks about “nuclear accident,” “radiation exposure,” and “evacuation.”
I understand there is a danger of radiation exposure. I learned about dangers of nuclear power plant. But I don’t want to destroy my current life.... A 19-year-old college preparatory school student from Date City, Fukushima Prefecture, talked about how she really felt now that a little over three years have passed since the Tokyo Electric Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power accident. Her thyroid examination result showed “A2.” Meanwhile, there is a sense of security, “It might be okay.” from the fact that it has been three years. Saying “I want to make a decision on my life myself,” she continues to live in Date City while taking steps towards her dream of becoming a space engineer.
【Afraid of “Earthquake, Tsunami, and Nuclear Power】
March 11, 2011. It was the day of her graduation from junior high school.
After coming home, she was relaxing on the second floor of her house when severe shaking began. All she could do was protect her own body under the table. She managed to close the curtains for fear of window glass breaking, but there was nothing else she was able to do. A tea cup fell and hit her on the buttock. When she collected her senses, she saw the room was in total destruction.
As the aftershocks continued periodically, she went to pick up her younger brother with her father. Six years younger than her, he was in the third grade at the time. As he began to walk home with his father and sister, he started to cry. He was so scared when the earthquake happened. He was so afraid that he wanted to cry. But he held back his tears as he tried to cheer up his classmates so they wouldn’t cry.
There was no space in her house where they could lie down. It was the middle of winter in Fukushima. Snow began falling. It was bone cold. They ended up spending two nights in an unused vinyl green house. Lifeline such as electricity and water remained severed. Her worried mother sent the children to her parents’ house in Iisaka Town, Fukushima City. When she managed to have the cell phone fully charged, it showed multiple dubious chain e-mails. She said, “We couldn’t watch TV at all. Radio was only turned on occasionally. We had no idea there were serious events happening in Hamadori, let alone the nuclear power plant exploded…”
She came to realize there was something happening when she was playing soccer with her younger brother. Her aunt said, “There is something seriously wrong with the nuclear power plant.”
“It is often said, ‘Earthquake, thunder, fire, and father.’ I thought about which one is really the most frightening. You can prevent damages from thunder and fire. My father is scary when he is angry (laugh), but earthquake and tsunami, and nuclear power, are the most frightening.”
The “frightening” incident actually happened. Soon, radiation levels within Date City exceed 20 μSv/h.
【Doubts About “Safety Promotion” at an Early Age】
She has been interested in nuclear power plants since in grade school. School textbooks only showed merits of nuclear power plants, but she says, “I was lucky to have a teacher who also taught us risks of nuclear power plants.” At the time, there were always events held in Fukushima City during summer breaks for “safety promotion.” She went to them every summer, but she never totally believed them. In the ninth grade, one of the summer homework assignments was to collect and summarize newspaper articles. You choose a theme, collect related articles, and summarize them. She chose “pluthermal, or plutonium-thermal use” as her theme. Recycling of uranium and plutonium collected during the reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel. She even read a book about it, and the more she dug into it, the more doubtful she became. She said “Only safety was emphasized. Why are they doing ‘safety promotion’?”
Therefore, it was natural that she began to seal all windows when returning home, in an attempt to protect her family from radiation, to the point where her father said, “Is all that really necessary?” She was pre admitted to high school during the first semester, so she didn’t have to go to the prefectural high school entrance examination result announcement which was held despite high radiation levels. However, she had to go and register for high school entrance, which meant she had to physically go to the prefectural high school she was admitted into. She covered herself with a mask and a muffler, minimizing skin exposure, and she washed her face carefully upon returning home. Even with all the precaution taken, the result of her thyroid ultrasound examination, done in January 2012, nine months after the high school began, was “A2” (nodules equal to or smaller than 5 mm or cysts equal to or smaller than 20 mm).
“I am worried if my future children will be affected when I get married and have babies.”
However, even three-plus years after the accident, she still hasn’t evacuated out of Fukushima Prefecture. Even when she might be admitted to a university, she is thinking about commuting from home. Why? She had conflicts which appeared to be shared with many other Fukushima residents.
【I Want To Be the One to Decide on My Own Life】
“As radiation is colorless and invisible, I may not be connecting it with risk to my body… Also, although the air dose level in Date City was as high as 20 μSv/h immediately after the accident, I haven’t had any health effects. That makes me think maybe I will be okay.”
In the last 3 years, her parents tried various means of avoiding radiation exposure to protect her. She knows it will be difficult to evacuate out of Fukushima Prefecture for a financial reason and also because of caring for her ill grandparent. As her parents have tried hard, she thinks her family might be more protected than the others. She also feels anxious and lonely about living alone.
She thought about it for a bit, and announced, “I was accepted into a particular high school I wanted to get into, in order to be closer to what I want to do in the future. I am afraid of destroying what I have by evacuating. Also, it’s my own life. I should be the one to decide.”
Her dream is to become a space engineer. She says with a smile, “I want to develop an engine for a space probe.” Two years ago she participated in a overnight learning camp at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. She heard stories from an astronaut, Naoko Yamazaki. In order to fulfill her dream, she is studying to get into Tohoku University School of Engineering. “But I haven’t given up my other dream of becoming a dancer. I want to do both.” This year, she didn’t do well on the college entrance examination due to an illness. She commutes to a college preparatory school in Sendai, aiming to gain acceptance into Tohoku University next spring.
“What people think about radiation exposure and evacuation isn’t black and white. It might be gray close to being white, or gray close to being black. Perhaps another color would blend in. Many people think of radiation the same as air, but some people are working very hard to reduce the risk. I would like people outside Fukushima Prefecture to understand that.”
Two and a half year since the last examination, she had a repeat thyroid ultrasound examination at Fukushima Medical University. After the ultrasound examination, she said, “I saw cysts on the monitor.”
Details of Fukushima Thyroid Cancer Cases Revealed at the Japan Society of Clinical Oncology Meeting
On the first day of the 52nd Annual Meeting of Japan Society of Clinical Oncology which is being held on August 28 - 30 in Yokohama City, Japan, Shinichi Suzuki, a thyroid surgeon from Fukushima Medical University in charge of the Fukushima thyroid ultrasound examination, presented some details of the surgical cases in a presentation titled "Treatment of childhood thyroid cancer in Fukushima" during the Organ Specific Symposium 03: Up-to-Date Thyroid Cancer Treatment - Thyroid Cancer in Children and Adolescents. Suzuki has consistently declined to reveal these details during sessions of the Prefectural Oversight Committee Meeting for Fukushima Health (Management) Survey as well as the Fukushima Thyroid Examination Expert Subcommittee meetings.
From the news report, which is the only material available online containing information revealed by Suzuki, Fukushima Medical University operated on 54 of the 57 surgical cases, with 45 meeting the criteria for absolute surgical indications described at the August 24 Oversight Committee Meeting for Fukushima Health Survey, excerpted below:
According to Suzuki, 45 cases had a tumor diameter over 10 mm or metastases to lymph nodes or other organs, with 2 having lung metastases. From the news report, it is unclear how many of the 45 had lymph node metastases. Also, the latest thyroid examination results revealed two confirmed cases of poorly differentiated cancer, and it is unclear if these two cases were the cases with lung metastases. Of the other 9 cases, 7 were in close proximity to the trachea, again meeting the surgical indications. 2 cases turned out to be precautionary surgeries based on the wishes of the patient and/or family. As about 90 % of the surgical cases had hemithyroidectomy, meaning a surgical removal of one lobe of the thyroid gland, most of the patients have some thyroid function preserved, although the risk of recurrence still exists.
In regards to the timing and place of Suzuki's report, although it would seem more appropriate for him to present the details at the Prefectural Oversight Committee Meeting for Fukushima Health Survey, the following fact must be addressed: The cases which advance beyond a certain point of the secondary examination, such as biopsy, are no longer part of the Fukushima thyroid ultrasound examination as screening but rather go under regular medical care. Therefore it appears legitimate that Suzuki presented them at an academic conference first.
However, it's a different matter whether this was a moral act. Suzuki has been repeatedly asked by committee members and journalists to disclose more details about the surgical cases. There have been many speculations about whether there have been overdiagnosis and overtreatment, creating a lot of arguments and confusion. Suzuki maintained Fukushima Medical University was following the diagnostic criteria, yet he would not reveal details. He said at one of the committee meetings that Fukushima Medical University would be fulfilling its social responsibility towards Fukushima residents by submitting academic papers to inform the world of what is happening. Although the Fukushima Health Survey is intended to watch over the health of residents and stand by them, many Fukushima residents distrust Fukushima Medical University enough to refuse participation. Fukushima Medical University's social responsibility should be, first and foremost, to maintain an honest and transparent relationship with residents. In that sense, Suzuki has effectively failed them.
By the way, those over age 18 no longer qualify for free medical care for Fukushima children. As 57 of the 104 confirmed or suspected of cancer were over age 18, more than half of them are facing a financial burden (Japan's National Health Insurance requires 30% copay) in addition to a physical and psychological burden of having cancer, as the treatments and follow-ups are conducted as part of regular medical care.
Incidentally, President of the 52nd Annual Meeting of Japan Society of Clinical Oncology, Seiichi Takenoshita, is Professor and Chairman of the Department of Organ Regulatory Surgery, Fukushima Medical University. In other words, he is Suzuki's boss.
Suzuki is scheduled to speak again during the August 30 Fukushima Session called “Message from Fukushima,” featuring Shunichi Yamashita as a keynote speaker. Yamashita will speak on "Scope for the future of Fukushima; resilience creation after the nuclear accident." Suzuki's presentation is called "Radiation exposure and thyroid ultrasound examination from the data of the Fukushima Health Management Survey."
Below is a complete translation of the Nikkei article, originally by Kyodo, posted online at 10:05 pm on August 28, 2014.
Children with Thyroid Cancer “Unlikely To Be the Effect of the Nuclear Accident,” Fukushima Examination Reported at an Academic Meeting
On August 28th, Professor Shinichi Suzuki from Fukushima Medical University reported details about surgical cases of children who were diagnosed to have strong suspicion of cancer at the Japan Society of Clinical Oncology meeting held in Yokohama City. These children were diagnosed during the thyroid examination conducted by Fukushima Prefecture because of the Tokyo Electric Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident.
After presenting his viewpoint that cancer cases were unlikely to be the effect of the nuclear accident, Suzuki referred to some opinions about possibilities of overdiagnoses and unnecessary surgeries. He emphasized that “treatment was based on the [diagnostic] criteria.”
Fukushima Prefecture’s thyroid examination targets approximately 370,000 residents who were younger than 18 at the time of the disaster/accident. So far 57 children have been confirmed to have cancer, and 46 are “suspected of cancer.” Comparing to the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident which saw a skyrocketed increase in pediatric thyroid cancer, Suzuki stated, “[Fukushima is] different from Chernobyl in terms of symptoms and age distribution.”
Regarding the 54 cases, out of 57 cancer cases, operated on at Fukushima Medical University, 45 cases, or a little over 80%, exhibited tumor diameter over 10 mm or metastases to lymph nodes or other organs, meeting the diagnostic criteria for surgery. Two cases had lung metastases.
Remaining 9 cases had tumor diameter equal to or less than 10 mm and had no metastases, but in 7 of them, “Surgery was appropriate as the tumor was in close contact with the trachea.” Close observation and follow-up was deemed appropriate for [the remaining] 2 cases, but they were operated on based on the wishes of the patients and/or their families.
About 90% of the 54 cases operated on had hemithyroidectomy (removal of one lobe of the thyroid gland).
Regarding the thyroid cancer in Fukushima, some experts raised a question, “Did all of the cases operated on actually need surgery?” and some have requested disclosure of the patient data. (Kyodo)
From the news report, which is the only material available online containing information revealed by Suzuki, Fukushima Medical University operated on 54 of the 57 surgical cases, with 45 meeting the criteria for absolute surgical indications described at the August 24 Oversight Committee Meeting for Fukushima Health Survey, excerpted below:
(2) Regarding indications for surgery
In Japan, when thyroid cancer is suspected, absolute indications for surgery include pre-surgical tumor with a diameter equal to or greater than 10 mm, lymph node metastases, extrathyroidal extension, and distant metastases. Furthermore, tumors with a diameter of 10 mm or smaller, so-called microcarcinomas, might be followed with observation in adults. However, surgery might be indicated for microcarcinomas if they are accompanied by lymph node metastasis, distant metastasis or extrathyroidal spread, or in close proximity to the recurrent laryngeal nerve or the trachea.
***
In regards to the timing and place of Suzuki's report, although it would seem more appropriate for him to present the details at the Prefectural Oversight Committee Meeting for Fukushima Health Survey, the following fact must be addressed: The cases which advance beyond a certain point of the secondary examination, such as biopsy, are no longer part of the Fukushima thyroid ultrasound examination as screening but rather go under regular medical care. Therefore it appears legitimate that Suzuki presented them at an academic conference first.
However, it's a different matter whether this was a moral act. Suzuki has been repeatedly asked by committee members and journalists to disclose more details about the surgical cases. There have been many speculations about whether there have been overdiagnosis and overtreatment, creating a lot of arguments and confusion. Suzuki maintained Fukushima Medical University was following the diagnostic criteria, yet he would not reveal details. He said at one of the committee meetings that Fukushima Medical University would be fulfilling its social responsibility towards Fukushima residents by submitting academic papers to inform the world of what is happening. Although the Fukushima Health Survey is intended to watch over the health of residents and stand by them, many Fukushima residents distrust Fukushima Medical University enough to refuse participation. Fukushima Medical University's social responsibility should be, first and foremost, to maintain an honest and transparent relationship with residents. In that sense, Suzuki has effectively failed them.
By the way, those over age 18 no longer qualify for free medical care for Fukushima children. As 57 of the 104 confirmed or suspected of cancer were over age 18, more than half of them are facing a financial burden (Japan's National Health Insurance requires 30% copay) in addition to a physical and psychological burden of having cancer, as the treatments and follow-ups are conducted as part of regular medical care.
Incidentally, President of the 52nd Annual Meeting of Japan Society of Clinical Oncology, Seiichi Takenoshita, is Professor and Chairman of the Department of Organ Regulatory Surgery, Fukushima Medical University. In other words, he is Suzuki's boss.
Suzuki is scheduled to speak again during the August 30 Fukushima Session called “Message from Fukushima,” featuring Shunichi Yamashita as a keynote speaker. Yamashita will speak on "Scope for the future of Fukushima; resilience creation after the nuclear accident." Suzuki's presentation is called "Radiation exposure and thyroid ultrasound examination from the data of the Fukushima Health Management Survey."
***
Below is a complete translation of the Nikkei article, originally by Kyodo, posted online at 10:05 pm on August 28, 2014.
Children with Thyroid Cancer “Unlikely To Be the Effect of the Nuclear Accident,” Fukushima Examination Reported at an Academic Meeting
On August 28th, Professor Shinichi Suzuki from Fukushima Medical University reported details about surgical cases of children who were diagnosed to have strong suspicion of cancer at the Japan Society of Clinical Oncology meeting held in Yokohama City. These children were diagnosed during the thyroid examination conducted by Fukushima Prefecture because of the Tokyo Electric Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant accident.
After presenting his viewpoint that cancer cases were unlikely to be the effect of the nuclear accident, Suzuki referred to some opinions about possibilities of overdiagnoses and unnecessary surgeries. He emphasized that “treatment was based on the [diagnostic] criteria.”
Fukushima Prefecture’s thyroid examination targets approximately 370,000 residents who were younger than 18 at the time of the disaster/accident. So far 57 children have been confirmed to have cancer, and 46 are “suspected of cancer.” Comparing to the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident which saw a skyrocketed increase in pediatric thyroid cancer, Suzuki stated, “[Fukushima is] different from Chernobyl in terms of symptoms and age distribution.”
Regarding the 54 cases, out of 57 cancer cases, operated on at Fukushima Medical University, 45 cases, or a little over 80%, exhibited tumor diameter over 10 mm or metastases to lymph nodes or other organs, meeting the diagnostic criteria for surgery. Two cases had lung metastases.
Remaining 9 cases had tumor diameter equal to or less than 10 mm and had no metastases, but in 7 of them, “Surgery was appropriate as the tumor was in close contact with the trachea.” Close observation and follow-up was deemed appropriate for [the remaining] 2 cases, but they were operated on based on the wishes of the patients and/or their families.
About 90% of the 54 cases operated on had hemithyroidectomy (removal of one lobe of the thyroid gland).
Regarding the thyroid cancer in Fukushima, some experts raised a question, “Did all of the cases operated on actually need surgery?” and some have requested disclosure of the patient data. (Kyodo)
First Round of Fukushima Thyroid Examination Complete: Provisional Results Show 57 Confirmed and 46 Suspected Cases of Thyroid Cancer, A Total of 103 Cases.
Sixteenth Prefectural Oversight Committee for Fukushima Health Survey convened on August 24, 2014, releasing the latest results of the thyroid examination, consisting of the near-complete results of the preliminary examination over the last three years, intended to obtain a baseline, as well as the partial results from the regular examination, which will keep track of any changes.
Official English translation of the results are available here.
The initial round of thyroid examination, the preliminary examination, finished as of March 31, 2014. Although not all the examinations have been completed, the provisional results, as of June 30, 2014, were released.The second round of thyroid examination, the regular examination, testing everyone again beginning with areas exposed to higher radiation doses, has already begun.
A summary of the results of the preliminary examination is provided below:
Total number of children examined as of June 30, 2014: 296,026
Total number of children whose initial examination results are confirmed: 295,689
Assessment A1 152,389 (51.5%) (no nodules or cysts found)
Assessment A2 141,063 (47.7%) (nodules 5.0 mm or smaller or cysts 20.0 mm or smaller)
Assessment B 2,236 (0.8%) (nodules 5.1 mm or larger or cysts 20.1 mm or larger)
Assessment C 1 (0.0%) (requiring immediate secondary examination)
Translation of some tables from the results of thyroid preliminary examination:
Page 3
Initial examination progress status
Secondary examination includes more detailed thyroid ultrasound, blood and urine tests, and fine-needle aspiration biopsy if warranted.
2,237 are eligible for secondary examination
1,951 have actually undergone secondary examination
1,848 finished the secondary examination
Page 4
Secondary examination progress status
〈Results and Discussion of regional comparison〉
A regional analysis was conducted of 295,689 participants who underwent the primary examination, excluding those who were confirmed to be duplicate entries and those whose results have not been finalized.
The result of the analysis revealed the rate of assessment categories B & C tended to increase in the order of “13 municipalities including the evacuation zone,” “Nakadori,” “Hamadori.” and Aizu Region.
On the other hand, the rate of of those “confirmed or suspected of malignancy” was almost the same in “13 municipalities including the evacuation zone,” “Nakadori,” and “Hamadori,” and slightly lower in “Aizu region.” This could be due to the fact that Aizu region has a lower proportion of secondary examination participants who actually completed it.
Commentary by the writer/translator:
As a reference to grasp the geographical relationship of these regions, the map below, excerpted from the August 25, 2014 Fukushima Minyu article, color-codes the above comparison regions.
Official English translation of the results are available here.
The initial round of thyroid examination, the preliminary examination, finished as of March 31, 2014. Although not all the examinations have been completed, the provisional results, as of June 30, 2014, were released.The second round of thyroid examination, the regular examination, testing everyone again beginning with areas exposed to higher radiation doses, has already begun.
A summary of the results of the preliminary examination is provided below:
Total number of children examined as of June 30, 2014: 296,026
Total number of children whose initial examination results are confirmed: 295,689
Assessment A1 152,389 (51.5%) (no nodules or cysts found)
Assessment A2 141,063 (47.7%) (nodules 5.0 mm or smaller or cysts 20.0 mm or smaller)
Assessment B 2,236 (0.8%) (nodules 5.1 mm or larger or cysts 20.1 mm or larger)
Assessment C 1 (0.0%) (requiring immediate secondary examination)
Translation of some tables from the results of thyroid preliminary examination:
Page 3
Initial examination progress status
Number and proportion of nodules and cysts
2,237 are eligible for secondary examination
1,951 have actually undergone secondary examination
1,848 finished the secondary examination
Page 4
Secondary examination progress status
Pages 5-6
2 Summary of fine-needle aspiration biopsy results
(1) Results of biopsy (as of June 30, 2014)
(2) Regarding indications for surgery
In Japan, when thyroid cancer is suspected, absolute indications for surgery include pre-surgical tumor with a diameter equal to or greater than 10 mm, lymph node metastases, extrathyroidal extension, and distant metastases. Furthermore, tumors with a diameter of 10 mm or smaller, so-called microcarcinomas, might be followed with observation in adults. However, surgery might be indicated for microcarcinomas if they are accompanied by lymph node metastasis, distant metastasis or extrathyroidal spread, or in close proximity to the recurrent laryngeal nerve or the trachea.
In our thyroid examination, participants who are found to be in the B or C assessment category during the primary examination go onto the secondary examination. Biopsy is recommended based on the findings of the repeat ultrasound examination. If the biopsy shows confirmed or suspected malignancy, they will be treated according to the above indication criteria, with adequate informed consent.
In addition, treatment guideline mentioned above has been discussed at the Diagnostic Criteria Assessment Subcommittee of the Thyroid Examination Expert Committee, consisting of specialists from related specialty societies.
References:
Thyroid Ultrasound Diagnostic Guidebook 2010 (Edited by Japan Association of Endocrine Surgeons and Japan Society of Thyroid Surgery)
Thyroid Ultrasound Diagnostic Guidebook, revised, 2nd edition (Edited by The Japan Association of Breast and Thyroid Sonology and Thyroid Terminology and Diagnostic Criteria Committee)
Thyroid Nodule Treatment Clinical Guidelines 2013 (Edited by Japan Thyroid Association)
***
Commentary by the writer/translator:
In summary, there were 14 more cancer cases, 4 boys and 10 girls, confirmed since the last report on May 19, 2014. All 14 cases came from the FY2013 targeted municipalities, where the secondary examination is still ongoing.
The total number of cases confirmed or suspected of cancer is 104. Of these, 59 had surgeries as of June 30, 2014 and 1 turned out to be a benign nodule, 55 were confirmed to be papillary thyroid cancer, and 2 were confirmed as poorly differentiated thyroid cancer. Additionally, 46 were "suspected" of having thyroid cancer. (The total number of cases confirmed or suspected of cancer is often reported as 103 in news reports, excluding the case confirmed to be benign).
In the Asahi Shimbun article, released in the morning of August 24, 2014 and contained apparently leaked information, Fukushima Medical University was quoted as saying it was unlikely that these cancer cases were related to radiation exposure.
Although the data is incomplete as the results from the Aizu area, part of the FY2013 municipalities, are not all available, a table was provided for regional comparison.
Page 10
Table 9: Proportions of subjects in B&C assessment categories as well as confirmed/suspected of malignancy (provisional)
Note 10: Excluding duplicate data and unconfirmed results
Note 11: The number of participants whose fine-needle aspiration biopsy results, done before June 30, are confirmed.
Note 12: Excluding one case that was suspected of malignancy but turned out to be benign after surgery
Note 13: Tamura City, Minamisoma City, Date City, Kawamata Town, Hirono Town, Naraha Town, Tomioka Town, Kawauchi Village, Okuma Town, Futaba Town, Namie Town, Katsurao Village and Iitate Village
Note 14: Fukushima City, Koriyama city, Shirakawa City, Sukagawa City, Nihonmatsu City, Motomiya City, Koori Town, Kunimi Town, Otamamura Village, Kagamiishi Town, Tenei Village, Nishigou Village, Izumizaki Village, Nakajima Village, Yabuki Town, Tanagura Town, Yamatsuri Town, Hanawa Town, Samegawa Village, Ishikawa Town, Tamakawa Village, Hirata Village, Asakawa Town, Furudono Town, Miharu Town, and Ono Town
Note 15: Iwaki City, Soma City, Shinchi Town
Note 16: Aizuwakamatsu City, Kitakata City, Shimogo Town, Hinoemata Village, Tadami Town, Minamiaizu Town, Kitashiobara Village, Nishiaizu Town, Bandai Town, Inawashiro Town, Aizubange Town, Yugawa Village, Yanaizu Town, Mishima Town, Showa Village, and Aizumisato Town
〈Results and Discussion of regional comparison〉
A regional analysis was conducted of 295,689 participants who underwent the primary examination, excluding those who were confirmed to be duplicate entries and those whose results have not been finalized.
The result of the analysis revealed the rate of assessment categories B & C tended to increase in the order of “13 municipalities including the evacuation zone,” “Nakadori,” “Hamadori.” and Aizu Region.
On the other hand, the rate of of those “confirmed or suspected of malignancy” was almost the same in “13 municipalities including the evacuation zone,” “Nakadori,” and “Hamadori,” and slightly lower in “Aizu region.” This could be due to the fact that Aizu region has a lower proportion of secondary examination participants who actually completed it.
(End of page 10)
***
Commentary by the writer/translator:
As a reference to grasp the geographical relationship of these regions, the map below, excerpted from the August 25, 2014 Fukushima Minyu article, color-codes the above comparison regions.
Red: 13 municipalities including the evacuation zone
Blue: Nakadori
Yellow: Hamadori
Green: Aizu region
(Source)
However, this particular grouping of municipalities to form comparison regions is drawing some criticisms as it may not be a good reflection of how the radioactive plume spread. For instance, Hamadori as defined here, which is not exactly the same as the conventional Hamadori, clumps Iwaki City where the highly radioactive plume hit, together with two municipalities up north on the Fukushima-Miyagi border, which did not receive as much plume. Also, a municipality might not be uniformly contaminated depending on its topography.
***
As for the partial results of the regular examination (the second round of examination), 28,575 have gone through the primary examination from the 2014 targeted municipalities, out of 213,223 eligible, and results have been determined for 6,458 of them. There were 46 in the B assessment category, but it was unclear if all of these individuals were also in the B category in the preliminary examination, or if any of these cases are newly diagnosed.
A Surprising Disclosure During the Ninth Session of the Ministry of the Environment Expert Meeting
A
Surprising Disclosure During the Ninth Session of the Ministry of the
Environment Expert Meeting
Shigenobu Nagataki appeared to be
low-keyed during the ninth session of the Expert Meeting Regarding
the Status of Health Management of Residents Following the Tokyo
Electric Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant Accident held on
August 5th, 2014. Perhaps he was still reeling from the
aftermath of the last sessioni
ii,
held on July 16th, when he was bombarded with five
outspoken expert witnesses.
During the ninth session, Nagataki's
demeanor was hesitant yet assertive, trying to build a consensus as a
chairman. At one point he reiterated the purpose of the Expert
Meeting as the place for experts to seriously consider what is really
the best way to manage the health of those who were affected by the
disaster, as if he were trying to remind himself. He also made a few
statements suggestive of imposing a burden of responsibility on each
committee member.
However, it almost seemed as if he were
beginning to alienate some of the committee members due to the
unreasonable way he was carrying out the proceedings. He seemed in a
hurry to wrap up the dose assessment portion of the discussion, but
some of the committee members expressed objections to the dose
assessment summaryiii,
prepared by the MOE to be included in the interim report, citing too
many uncertainties regarding the dose assessment itself to draw a
hasty conclusion. This was the summary which Nagataki was working
hard to have endorsed by the committee. In particular, Toshimitsu
Honma from Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) pointed out the prepared
summary could be misleading, since it included two contradictory
statements which could not coexist scientifically: One statement was
that it was unlikely that residents were exposed to doses over 100
mSv, while the other was that the possibility of someone receiving
over 100 mSv exposure dose could not be ruled out.
In short, the table seemed to be
turned: Nagataki no longer appeared to be in control.
Another committee member, Hiromi
Ishikawa from Japan Medical Association, suggested that the committee
move onto discussions on health survey and medical measures, as he
has been told there would only be two more session scheduled. Honma
added on, stating that the completion of dose assessment and risk
assessment isn’t necessarily required for the discussion on health
survey. The Ministry of the Environment (MOE) official quickly
declared that they weren’t limited to just two more sessions. It
appeared that the entire atmosphere of the Expert Meeting shifted to
allow for more time for future discussion.
Meanwhile, the citizens’ group from
the Kanto area, comprising of concerned parents from Ibaraki
Prefecture, western Chiba Prefecture and eastern Saitama Prefecture
where hot spots can be found, submitted to the MOE Vice-Minister
Tomoko Ukishima a formal request to remove Nagataki as a chairman. In
addition, a few members of the audience, under the strict prohibition
from vocalizing any opposition, silently held up signs stating,
“We don’t need a skewed chairman” and “Do you have any
conscience?” (Incidentally, these actions possibly led to even more
strict and tightened guidelinesiv
for the audience for the next session on August 27, 2014, absolutely
prohibiting any sort of display of opinions, verbal or written, and
requiring the audience candidate to agree to such a condition when
they enter their names into a lottery selecting the actual audience.
Also during the ninth session, there
was an unexpected disclosure of crucial information from one of the
two expert witnesses, Akira Miyauchi, a thyroid, breast, and
endocrine surgeon from Kuma Hospital, a hospital in Kobe, Hyogo
Prefecture, which specializes in thyroid illnesses. First, as an
expert witness, he gave an overview of thyroid microcarcinomav.
He emphasized that the data was from adults and therefore it might
not be extrapolated to children, and that there was very little data
available for pediatric microcarcinoma of thyroid gland, in general
as well as at Kuma Hospital.
When Nagataki askedvi
if an early detection of small thyroid cancer would mean
hemithyroidectomy, where only a half of the thyroid gland is removed,
preserving some thyroid function and eliminating the need for
administration of thyroid hormone, Miyauchi stated,”Papillary
thyroid cancers tend to occur in multiples. Therefore, even though
the thyroid cancer might be discovered when small, it might still be
necessary to conduct a total thyroidectomy [meaning the removal of
the entire thyroid gland]. Removing smaller (3 to 9 mm) cancers would
significantly increase the number of total thyroidectomies performed.
To be honest with you, even though the complication rate might be
low, an increased number of total thyroidectomies would inevitably
lead to some cases of permanent hypoparathyroidism. Therefore, I
don’t think it is a good idea to operate on every case. “
Fukushima Medical University Vice
President Masafumi Abe chimed in to defend the validity of thyroid
cancer cases which have been operated on so far. “Fukushima Medical
University has been conducting thyroid ultrasound examination, and so
far there are a total of 90 confirmed or suspected malignant cases.
Of these, 51 had surgeries and 50 were confirmed to be cancer,
including microcarcinoma smaller than 10 mm. Our facility is only
operating on cases which are deemed high risk.”
Miyauchi followed, “To supplement
what was just stated, I am also a member of the Diagnostic Criteria
Inquiry Subcommittee of the Thyroid Examination Expert Committee. The
day before yesterday I attended the subcommittee meeting where the
information about the surgical cases at Fukushima Medical University
was presented. According to the presentation, at least over 70% of
the cases had conditions which would be ordinarily considered
appropriate for surgery, based on our current standard of care, such
as the tumor size over 1 cm, the presence of lymph node metastases,
or some aggressive cases with distant metastases. Regarding the
remaining 30%, Dr. Suzuki explained that those cases were operated on
as they were what we consider high risk, such as being near the
recurrent laryngeal nerve or contacting the trachea.”
This statement by Miyauchi immediately
caught everyone's attention, especially in the social stream timeline
for the Ustream channel for OurPlanet-TVvii,
where the Internet audience was writing in comments while watching
the Expert Meeting in real time. Details regarding the Diagnostic
Criteria Inquiry Subcommittee, established on September 18, 2011,
have been sketchy. Its existence was mentioned during the fourth
session of the Prefectural Oversight Committee Meetings for Fukushima
Health Management Surveyviii.
It was established to bring consistency to examinations on evacuees
residing outside Fukushima Prefecture, and composed of thyroid
specialists, endocrine and thyroid surgeons, pediatric
endocrinologists, and ultrasound specialists. What is known up to
this point was that the subcommittee consisted of the following seven
organizations:
- Japan Thyroid Associationix
- Japan Association of Endocrine Surgeonsx
- Japan Society of Thyroid Surgeryxi
- The Japan Society of Ultrasonics in Medicinexii
- The Japan Society of Sonographers xiii
- The Japanese Society for Pediatric Endocrinologyxiv
- The Japan Association of Breast and Thyroid Sonologyxv
However, no record could be found, at
least on the Internet, regarding the proceedings of the “Diagnostic
Criteria Inquiry Subcommittee.” A freelance journalist, Ryuichi
Kino, tweeted that the document obtained through information
disclosure was heavily redacted, with the names of the subcommittee
members blacked out.
Miyauchi’s self-admittance that he
was a subcommittee member, therefore, was a pleasant surprise. He was
disclosing information that was not readily provided by Shinichi
Suzuki, a thyroid surgeon at FMU in charge of the thyroid
examination, at the third session of the Thyroid Examination
Assessment Subcommittee, held on June 10, 2014, when Kenji Shibuya,
an epidemiologist and a public health specialist from the University
of Tokyo, raised a possibility of over-diagnosis and over-treatmentxvi.
At the time, all Suzuki would admit, defending the decision to
operate, was that some cases had lymph node metastases or hoarseness
[which indicates the involvement of the recurrent laryngeal nerve].
Suzuki would not give the percentage of the cases which actually had
lymph node metastases or hoarseness. He even said he wasn’t the one
who decided not to reveal the information.
Miyauchi’s revelation essentially
validated the surgeries performed at FMU so far, dispelling the
criticism that the screening was harmful and not really warranted.
Then, quite curiously, Nagataki started
off the question and answer session by presenting a hypothetical
situation to Miyauchi, saying, “For instance, if we conduct a
screening, some cancers would always be discovered. If we continue on
with the screening and remove all the cancers we find even though
some may not have risks [of becoming aggressive] because there is a
sense of security in simply removing anything that might remotely be
dangerous, ultimately one in ten or one in one hundred children in
Fukushima might end up getting their thyroid glands removed. Some
might say that would be acceptable as long as it brought a sense of
security. What do you think about such an idea?”
Miyauchi quickly said, as if
reprimanding Nagataki, “I think the numbers you just gave are
rather extreme.”
Then Miyauchi continued, “As I
mentioned earlier, I am a member of the Diagnostic Criteria Inquiry
Subcommittee of the Fukushima Thyroid Examination Expert Committee,
so I am quite familiar with why the thyroid screening is being
conducted in Fukushima Prefecture. As we know that pediatric thyroid
cancer notably increased after the Chernobyl accident, and most
members of the general public are aware of it and worried whether
thyroid cancers would also increase in Fukushima. Given such a
concern, for one thing, a scientific assessment had to be carried out
to see if there would actually be an increase. The other thing is to
monitor the health of the residents. I understand both of these
issues are rather difficult issues. Based on these conditions, as
mentioned earlier, what should be done is to do everything according
to certain criteria; to conduct an examination according to a certain
criterion, to read the ultrasound image according to a certain
criterion, to decide whether or not to conduct fine needle aspiration
biopsy according to a certain criterion, and so on. This is what is
happening in Fukushima Prefecture. For instance, our hospital has
examined Fukushima residents who moved to the Kansai area, at the
request of FMU. The ultrasound examination data is not assessed by
us. Instead, it is sent to FMU to be read according to a certain
criterion. If the fine needle aspiration biopsy is needed, we will
conduct the biopsy based on instructions from FMU and send the
specimen to FMU. So my understanding is that they are making an
effort to maintain a certain standard in every way possible.”
Mass screening is almost always
accompanied by a possibility of over-diagnosis and over-treatment. In
case of thyroid cancer, surgery is not risk-free. In the previous
sessions of the MOE Expert Meeting, pros and cons of cancer
screenings were discussed, especially in relation to adult cancer
screenings, given the fact the residents had concerns regarding their
health after having been exposed to the radioactive releases from
FDNPP. Gen Suzuki suggested the exposure dose was too low to warrant
the screening. The consensus of the seventh session of the MOE
Expert Meeting, citing the low exposure doses, appeared to be on the
passive side in regards to offering health checkups, including cancer
screenings, to the Fukushima residents outside of the evacuation zone
as well as the residents of neighboring prefectures.
There even appeared to be movements,
both by a certain group of citizens and citizen scientists on Twitter
and by some experts, like the University of Tokyo researchers, to do
away with the thyroid ultrasound examination of those who were 18 or
younger at the time of the accident, claiming over-diagnosis and
over-treatment.
However, the biggest issue was that
Fukushima Medical University lacked transparency to disclose
information necessary for the outside experts to properly evaluate
the situation.
Miyauchi’s statement at least
validates the way Fukushima Medical University is handling surgical
cases. However, his statement also raises a concern that there are so
many thyroid cancers which are considered high risk. After all,
Shunichi Yamashita and Shinichi Suzuki kept saying that these cancers
were considered latent cancers which would not be discoverable until
much later in life. The reality is that these are clinically obvious
cancers, and the question would be why there are so many such cases.
The government and Fukushima Medical University have maintained that
the thyroid abnormality rates, such as nodules, cysts, and even
cancer, do not differ between Fukushima Prefecture and the rest of
the nation (citing the MOE study in Yamanashi, Aomori and Nagano
Prefecturesxvii),
in an attempt to dispel any relationship between the thyroid
abnormalities and radiation exposure.
On August 24, 2014, the sixteenth
session of the Assessment Committee for the Fukushima Prefecture
Health Survey is to be held. It is expected that the full report of
the first round (FY2011-2013) of the thyroid ultrasound examination
will be released, along with some of the result from the second round
which has already begun.
We must keep close tabs on how the
number of thyroid cancer cases might change from the first to the
second round. If it's truly a screening effect, the second round
should not yield as many thyroid cancers. Meanwhile, FMU needs to be
more transparent, sharing some crucial information with the medical
and scientific communities, of course, with a full consideration to
preserve patient confidentiality. Suzuki mentioned that FMU was
accumulating all sorts of data from the thyroid examination,
including the radiation exposure data, so that studies could be
published. He said that was the way FMU was trying to fulfill its
social responsibility. However, their social responsibility really
should rest on the residents first, not so much the publication of
scientific paper.
References
Questioning the Very Status of the Ministry of the Environment Expert Meeting Regarding the Status of Disaster Victims' Health Management
Questioning the Very Status of the Ministry of the Environment
Expert
Meeting Regarding
the
Status of Disaster Victims' Health Management
It
might have been a slip of a tongue, but Chairman Shigenobu Nagataki,
an emeritus professor at Nagasaki University, a former chairman of
Radiation Effects Research Foundation, and a mentor to infamous
Shunichi Yamashita, appeared to be speaking earnestly when he said,
"Committee members, please do not hesitate to ask questions.
Given what was just stated, it will be disastrous for this committee
to have to conclude that there is an actual increase in thyroid
cancer [due to the Fukushima accident]." Toshihide Tsuda, a
physician and an epidemiologist at Okayama University, has just
emphatically stated that in certain Fukushima municipalities there
was a clear evidence of a thyroid cancer epidemic in those who were
18 or younger at the time of the March 2011 accident. Calling this an
“outbreak, occurring only 3.1 to 3.2 years after the accident,”
Tsuda stressed that in the near future, thyroid cancer would begin to
appear in those with relatively longer latency periods, which means a
quick action is needed to secure adequate medical resources in order
to be able to provide diagnosis and treatment in a timely manner.
This
conversation happened during the eighth session of the Expert Meeting
Regarding the Status of Health Management of Residents Following the
Tokyo Electric Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plan Accident, held by
the Ministry of the Environment on July 16, 2014. The Expert Meeting
was originally established in order to discuss the health care and
radiation exposure aspects of the Children and Disaster Victims
Support Act, which was approved by the Diet in June 2012.
As
a background, Fukushima Prefecture is already conducing health
management survey for the residents utilizing a fund established by
the national government. However, the national government is in need
of discussing the current status of health management and its
challenges in Fukushima Prefecture as well as the surrounding
prefectures from a medical viewpoint. In addition, the Children and
Disaster Victims Support Act requires the national government to take
any necessary measures regarding surveys on radiation health effects.
Based on these needs, the Expert Meeting was established within the
Ministry of the Environment to discuss, from an expert perspective,
the status of measures for grasping and assessing exposure doses,
health management, and medical care.
Fundamentals
of the Children and Disaster Victims Support Act are summarized as
follows:
- providing accurate information;
- supporting the choice of residing, moving and returning based on the intention of disaster victims;
- making efforts for prompt alleviation of health concerns from radiation exposure;
- giving due consideration so that disaster victims do not face unwarranted discrimination;
- giving special consideration for children (including fetuses) and pregnant women;
- and continuing a long-term and reliable support for radiation effects as long as needed.
Issues
discussed at the MOE Expert Meeting were in particular related to the
Article 13 of the Children and Disaster Victims Support Act, in
regards to the study on health effects of radiation exposure and the
provision of medical care. The Article 13 reads as follows:
- In order to clarify the situation of radiation exposure caused by the Tokyo Electric nuclear accident, the national government shall take measures such as estimating radiation exposure doses and assessing exposure doses using tests effective for dose assessment, and any other necessary measures.
- The national government shall take necessary measures in regards to implementing regular medical checkups for the disaster victims and conducting other surveys of health effects from radiation exposure due to the Tokyo Electric nuclear accident. In this case, necessary measures should be taken so that those who have resided in areas with radiation levels measured above a certain threshold as children (including those who were in utero when their mothers resided in such areas), or those in equivalent circumstances, shall have lifelong medical checkups.
- In relation to the medical expenses to be borne by children or pregnant women who are disaster victims (excluding medical care relating to injuries or illnesses not caused by radiation exposure due to the Tokyo Electric nuclear accident), the national government shall take necessary measures to reduce the financial burden or any other measures relating to the provision of medical care to the disaster victims.
A
point of contention at the MOE Expert Meeting, headed by Nagataki,
has been the dose assessment, especially the direct measurements of
thyroid glands of 1,080 children (age 0 to 15), conducted in late
March 2011. Nagataki seemed determined to utilize the direct
measurement data, which concluded that nobody exceeded 50 mSv,
despite critical issues such as a small sample size and high
background radiation levels. He has been trying to build an “expert
consensus” regarding the validity of the direct measurement data.
However, guest presentations by experts at the Expert Meeting have
revealed that the contamination level of clothing, not the background
air dose rate, was used as the background radiation level, which was
subtracted from the actual count to obtain the exposure dose. This
could have potentially resulted in underestimation.
In
addition, Nagataki emphasized how the high kombu (a type of seaweed
with especially high iodine content) consumption rate amongst the
Japanese offered protective effects against radioactive iodine, given
the fact the majority of children never received stable iodine
tablets for thyroid blocking before exposure to the radioactive
plume. However, the actual consumption amount of kombu in last 40
years has gone down, for reasons such as the introduction of western
food in the 1970s. According to Nagataki's presentation at the 2007
American Thyroid Association meeting, the average dietary iodine
intake from seaweeds was 1.2 mg/day in Japan1.
However, kombu consumption appears to be decreasing each year,
especially in younger families with children which consumed one-third
of average amount of seaweed consumption, due to decreased
consumption of traditional foods. Children's dietary intake from
seaweeds might be a quarter to one-third of Nagataki's outdated
claim.
As
each session of the Expert Meeting progressed, Nagataki worked
towards building a consensus to “scientifically” validate the
1,080 screening data for dose assessment and thus the basis for
estimating health risks, despite its shortcomings. The exposure dose
estimate from the 1,080 screening data, well below 100 mSv, which is
widely regarded by regulators and radiation protection specialists as
the level cancers might increase, would allow the government to claim
that health risks is too low to necessitate expansion of medical
checkups to wider areas and age groups. At the seventh session held
on June 25, 2014, Nagataki pointed out2
that “Times are different between now and when the Children and
Disaster Victims Support Act was approved. We now have more dose
assessment data which allow us to talk about the health risks
scientifically. This is a huge difference,” when Hiromi Ishikawa,
the executive director of Japan Medical Association, pressed for
consideration of introduction of medical checkups in hotspots outside
Fukushima Prefecture, such as Matsudo and Kamagaya in Chiba
Prefecture, based on the principle of the Children and Disaster
Victims Support Act.
As
a matter of fact, in his attempt to build an expert consensus,
Nagataki appeared not to take into consideration opinions of outside
experts if they differed from his. Even more, he appeared to be
trying to disregard the very mission of the Expert Meeting:
discussing radiation health effects and health management on the
basis of the Children and Disaster Victims Support Act.
This
became the most apparent at the July 16th
session, as depicted in the July 22 Tokyo Shimbun article, translated
into English here.
Tsuda,
one of the five expert witnesses invited, claims that the current
“outbreak” of thyroid cancers in Fukushima children cannot be
explained by the “screening effect,” when the data is analyzed
and compared with the national cancer statistics as well as within
Fukushima Prefecture against municipalities with the lowest exposure
dose.
Table
1 Comparison of thyroid cancer detection probabilities within Fukushima
Prefecture
(Prevalence
Odds Ratio determined against Aizu and Soma areas as the control).
Critical of the commonly accepted notion that health effects do not occur below 100 mSv, Tsuda presented numerous published studies that proved otherwise. In fact, he by far exceeded 10 minutes allotted for each of the five expert witnesses that day, and Nagataki had to nudge him to wrap up more than twice. Tsuda defiantly replied, “This Expert Meeting has not brought up these studies [as it should have], so I must do it [for you],” and went on until he was done.
Critical of the commonly accepted notion that health effects do not occur below 100 mSv, Tsuda presented numerous published studies that proved otherwise. In fact, he by far exceeded 10 minutes allotted for each of the five expert witnesses that day, and Nagataki had to nudge him to wrap up more than twice. Tsuda defiantly replied, “This Expert Meeting has not brought up these studies [as it should have], so I must do it [for you],” and went on until he was done.
Tsuda
explained that in outbreak epidemiology, which was developed as an
investigative tool in studying disease outbreaks where the cause
isn't always apparent, the effect (disease) is what is studied and
dealt with. He called the Expert Meeting's fixation on dose
assessment “backwards” and “a mere laboratory method.” Tsuda
said to Nagataki, “We must remember that this is an issue of
humans.”
Tsuda
also said that the Expert Meeting should consider the fact that all
age groups including pregnant women were still being exposed to
radiation in Fukushima Prefecture. This drew an applause from the
audience of general public, which made Nagataki displeased. He said,
“Um, this applause...haven't the audience been asked not to
applause ahead of time?” This statement also appeared to startle
Nagataki and other members, such as Otsura Niwa, a retired Kyoto
University Professor who holds a position of Special Professor at
Fukushima Medical University. Both Nagataki and Niwa, in disbelief,
had to confirm with Tsuda what he meant. Tsuda said, “We are all
being exposed to radiation in Japan, except the air dose rate is
higher in Fukushima.”
During
the debate following the presentations by the witnesses, there were
some questions regarding Tsuda's presentation as described in this
post.
Tsuda insisted that the World Health Organization (WHO) report
clearly stated thyroid cancer, leukemia, breast cancer and other
solid cancers would increase. In response, Niwa talked3
about the dilemma he faced as a member of the WHO Health Risk
Assessment Expert Group, which compiled Health
risk assessment from the nuclear accident after the 2011 Great East
Japan earthquake and tsunami, based on a preliminary dose estimation4
in February 2013.
Niwa
felt that doses were overestimated due to various issues with
assumptions utilized in dose estimation. He repeatedly asked the
Expert Group to employ more realistic methods to estimate doses, but
the Expert Group chose to stick to higher estimate doses, taking a
conservative and cautious approach based on a radiation protection
concept. Niwa says he disagreed with the Expert Group's decision and
argued that the conservative approach certainly would be reasonable
and indeed very important in a prospective estimation, but that it
would not be appropriate to retrospectively estimate unnecessarily
high doses in those who were already exposed. Niwa disclosed during
the discussion that he suggested reducing the estimated doses by
one-tenth, but that the Expert Group never incorporated his
suggestion. (After the meeting was over, Tsuda and Niwa carried out
further, informal discussion on whether the thyroid cancer cases in
Fukushima were due to the screening effect or not. Tsuda asked Niwa
if he has ever read a single published study regarding a screening
effect. Niwa replied, “No, not myself.” Tsuda, speaking with a
freelance journalist, Oshidori Mako, expressed his disappointment and
frustration with the Expert Meeting, as the so-called experts were
not even familiar with studies published on health effects of
radiation below 100 mSv. Tsuda felt that it was impossible to carry
out sufficient arguments as the grasp of the basic knowledge differed
so much).
During
the concluding statement, Nagataki acknowledged that the consensus of
the Expert Meeting to accept United Nations Scientific Committee on
the Effects of Atomic Radiation's (UNSCEAR's) approach to assessing
health risks, based on dose estimation, appeared to differ vastly
from the opinions of the witnesses. He stated that the Expert Meeting
was taking a serious care to consider [the well-being of] the
disaster victims and earnestly discussing the best way to carry out
health management for them. This statement contradicts the statement
he made at the June 25 session, dismissing the Children and Disaster
Victims Support Act. Most of all, if the Expert Meeting were
seriously considerate of the disaster victims whose true exposure
doses are unknowable, due to the lack of sufficient early exposure
data, why would it be disastrous for this Expert Meeting to have a
conclusion that cases of thyroid cancers might be increasing? The
Expert Meeting would be truly serving the disaster victims if it
fully embraces its mission to expertly discuss radiation health
effects and health management, adhering to the principles of the
Article 13 of the Children and Disaster Victim Support Act, from the
viewpoint of precautionary principle, rather than having prejudged
conclusions.
Other
important issues to be raised about this Expert Meeting have to do
with the potential conflict of interest. For instance, Niwa, also a
member of International Committee on Radiation Protection (ICRP) , is
known to have received financial support from the Federation of
Electric Power Companies of Japan for his travel expenses to the ICRP
meetings5.
Although the WHO Expert Group cleared his conflict of interests in
this matter, citing his expertise in molecular biology and radiation
biology, he certainly appears to have a conflict of interest for the
MOE Expert Meeting.
Niwa
is not the only one with the potential conflict of interest. Chairman
Nagataki is currently a chairman of the board of Radiation Effects
Foundation6,
which arranged financial assistance from the Federation of Electric
Power Companies of Japan to Niwa. Some of the members, Nobuhiko Ban
and Toshimitsu Honma, were involved with the making of UNSCEAR
Fukushima report. Yasuhito Sasaki is a former committee chairmann of
UNSCEAR.
With
the deviation from its original mission and the apparently
predetermined conclusion to underestimate health risks, along with
the potential conflicts of interest in multiple members, is it not
time to question the very status of the Expert Meeting Regarding the
Status of Health Management of Residents Following the Tokyo Electric
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant Accident?
References:
References:
2 http://www.ourplanet-tv.org/?q=node/1800
(Japanese)
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