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by mpyne
4733 days ago
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The very idea that there is a threshold below which cancer risk is not appreciably affected is itself controversial. In fact, even saying controversial would not be enough, most major health physics societies assume there is no such threshold and that any exposure increases risk. Only France's national society and (IIRC) one U.S. health physics society seem to be confident enough in the current research to stake out a claim that there is a threshold. With all that said I personally lean towards the idea of a threshold-based response, though the no-threshold models are certainly easier to use for planning purposes (for which they've been used to assess risk for decades). Even if there is a threshold, that threshold may depend on length of previous exposure (acclimation) and may only be good for exposure within a certain time limit, both of which again make use within models more difficult (though not impossible). |
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It's controversial politically, not scientifically.
People have a knee jerk reaction to the idea of any radiation - except if it's natural of course, despite that making no sense.