A new study conducted among a large number of workers in the nuclear industry of UK revealed that more than the radiation exposure
A new study conducted among a large number of workers in the nuclear industry of UK revealed that more than the radiation exposure, mortality rate is influenced by the socio-economic status of the workers.
The researchers involved 64,937 individuals employed at the study sites between 1946 and 2002, and followed them up to 2005.Radiation exposures, as measured by personal dosimeters (‘film badges’), were available for 42,426 individuals classified as ‘radiation workers’.
Poisson regression models were used to investigate the relationship between excess mortality rates and cumulative radiation exposure, using both relative and additive risk models.
Based on their observations, the authors of the study wrote that the cohort showed a pronounced ‘healthy worker’ effect.
They said that overall, workers’ socio-economic status, as indicated by their employment status, had a greater influence on mortality than radiation exposure.
For male radiation workers, there was an apparent dose response for mortality from circulatory system disease. However, the researchers also found evidence for inhomogeneity in the apparent dose response, when they separately examined four categories of employment and radiation exposure status.
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They, however, said that the tentative nature of biological mechanisms that might explain such an effect at low chronic doses, and the above inhomogeneities in apparent dose–response, suggested that the results of their analysis were inconsistent with any simple causal interpretation.
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Source-ANI
SUN/K