It's Time for a New Low-Dose-Radiation Risk Assessment Paradigm—One that Acknowledges Hormesis

The current system of radiation protection for humans is based on the linear-no-threshold (LNT) risk-assessment paradigm. Perceived harm to irradiated nuclear workers and the public is mainly reflected through calculated hypothetical increased cancers. The LNT-based system of protection employs easy...

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Main Author: Bobby R. Scott PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2008-10-01
Series:Dose-Response
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2203/dose-response.07-005.Scott
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spelling doaj-7e3e1f17e6da416ba4150721c1f93d4c2020-11-25T02:58:08ZengSAGE PublishingDose-Response1559-32582008-10-01610.2203/dose-response.07-005.ScottIt's Time for a New Low-Dose-Radiation Risk Assessment Paradigm—One that Acknowledges HormesisBobby R. Scott PhDThe current system of radiation protection for humans is based on the linear-no-threshold (LNT) risk-assessment paradigm. Perceived harm to irradiated nuclear workers and the public is mainly reflected through calculated hypothetical increased cancers. The LNT-based system of protection employs easy-to-implement measures of radiation exposure. Such measures include the equivalent dose (a biological-damage-potential-weighted measure) and the effective dose (equivalent dose multiplied by a tissue-specific relative sensitivity factor for stochastic effects). These weighted doses have special units such as the sievert (Sv) and millisievert (mSv, one thousandth of a sievert). Radiation-induced harm is controlled via enforcing exposure limits expressed as effective dose. Expected cancer cases can be easily computed based on the summed effective dose (person-sievert) for an irradiated group or population. Yet the current system of radiation protection needs revision because radiation-induced natural protection (hormesis) has been neglected. A novel, nonlinear, hormetic relative risk model for radiation-induced cancers is discussed in the context of establishing new radiation exposure limits for nuclear workers and the public.https://doi.org/10.2203/dose-response.07-005.Scott
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bobby R. Scott PhD
spellingShingle Bobby R. Scott PhD
It's Time for a New Low-Dose-Radiation Risk Assessment Paradigm—One that Acknowledges Hormesis
Dose-Response
author_facet Bobby R. Scott PhD
author_sort Bobby R. Scott PhD
title It's Time for a New Low-Dose-Radiation Risk Assessment Paradigm—One that Acknowledges Hormesis
title_short It's Time for a New Low-Dose-Radiation Risk Assessment Paradigm—One that Acknowledges Hormesis
title_full It's Time for a New Low-Dose-Radiation Risk Assessment Paradigm—One that Acknowledges Hormesis
title_fullStr It's Time for a New Low-Dose-Radiation Risk Assessment Paradigm—One that Acknowledges Hormesis
title_full_unstemmed It's Time for a New Low-Dose-Radiation Risk Assessment Paradigm—One that Acknowledges Hormesis
title_sort it's time for a new low-dose-radiation risk assessment paradigm—one that acknowledges hormesis
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Dose-Response
issn 1559-3258
publishDate 2008-10-01
description The current system of radiation protection for humans is based on the linear-no-threshold (LNT) risk-assessment paradigm. Perceived harm to irradiated nuclear workers and the public is mainly reflected through calculated hypothetical increased cancers. The LNT-based system of protection employs easy-to-implement measures of radiation exposure. Such measures include the equivalent dose (a biological-damage-potential-weighted measure) and the effective dose (equivalent dose multiplied by a tissue-specific relative sensitivity factor for stochastic effects). These weighted doses have special units such as the sievert (Sv) and millisievert (mSv, one thousandth of a sievert). Radiation-induced harm is controlled via enforcing exposure limits expressed as effective dose. Expected cancer cases can be easily computed based on the summed effective dose (person-sievert) for an irradiated group or population. Yet the current system of radiation protection needs revision because radiation-induced natural protection (hormesis) has been neglected. A novel, nonlinear, hormetic relative risk model for radiation-induced cancers is discussed in the context of establishing new radiation exposure limits for nuclear workers and the public.
url https://doi.org/10.2203/dose-response.07-005.Scott
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