IC 7834 Engineering Control Of Health And Safety Hazards In Uranium Mines ? Summary And Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
James Westfield
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
23
File Size:
8141 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1958

Abstract

Uranium activity has introduced a comparatively new hazard to United States mining. In addition to the hazards common to all mines, uranium mines have a complex health problem of radiation damage. Like many new processes, radiation and nuclear energy can be made to serve man in many useful ways when properly understood and handled; but, like fire, gases, and electricity, their potential dangers must be known and respected, and appropriate precautions must be taken or death may result. Since 1950 the Public Health Service has been conducting basic investigations on exposure to radon and its daughter products and the effect of exposure upon the health of miners in uranium mines of the Western States. The Bureau of Mines assisted in several of these investigations, especially in mines on Indian lands. The studies have shown that a serious health hazard exists from radioactive exposure that might cause lung cancer if continued over a number of years. The Public Health Service report, Control of Radon and Daughters in Uranium Mines and Calculations on Biologic Effects,6/ shows that 55 percent of the uranium mines employing 64 percent of the miners had atmospheric concentrations more than five times the working level now accepted as reasonably safe for industrial exposures. Extensive control measures are necessary to reduce these concentrations to the suggested working level of less than 300 micromicrocuries of total radon daughter products per liter of air.
Citation

APA: James Westfield  (1958)  IC 7834 Engineering Control Of Health And Safety Hazards In Uranium Mines ? Summary And Introduction

MLA: James Westfield IC 7834 Engineering Control Of Health And Safety Hazards In Uranium Mines ? Summary And Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1958.

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