Background radiation impacts human longevity and cancer mortality: reconsidering the linear no-threshold paradigm

The current linear no-threshold paradigm assumes that any exposure to ionizing radiation carries some risk, thus every effort should be made to maintain the exposures as low as possible. We examined whether background radiation impacts human longevity and cancer mortality. Our data covered the entir...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biogerontology (Dordrecht) 2021-04, Vol.22 (2), p.189-195
Hauptverfasser: David, Elroei, Wolfson, Marina, Fraifeld, Vadim E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The current linear no-threshold paradigm assumes that any exposure to ionizing radiation carries some risk, thus every effort should be made to maintain the exposures as low as possible. We examined whether background radiation impacts human longevity and cancer mortality. Our data covered the entire US population of the 3139 US counties, encompassing over 320 million people. This is the first large-scale study which takes into account the two major sources of background radiation (terrestrial radiation and cosmic radiation), covering the entire US population. Here, we show that life expectancy, the most integrative index of population health, was approximately 2.5 years longer in people living in areas with a relatively high vs. low background radiation. (≥ 180 mrem/year and ≤ 100 mrem/year, respectively; p 
ISSN:1389-5729
1573-6768
DOI:10.1007/s10522-020-09909-4