Health Phys. 2015 Aug;109(2):122-33. doi: 10.1097/HP.0000000000000308.
Estimating Annual Individual Doses for Evacuees Returning Home to Areas Affected by the Fukushima Nuclear Accident.
Yajima K1, Kurihara O, Ohmachi Y, Takada M, Omori Y, Akahane K, Kim E, Torikoshi M, Yonehara H, Yoshida S, Sakai K, Akashi M.
Abstract
To
contribute to the reconstruction and revitalization of Fukushima
Prefecture following the 2011 nuclear power disaster, annual individual
doses were estimated for evacuees who will return home to Tamura City,
Kawauchi Village, and Iitate Village in Fukushima. Ambient external dose
rates and individual doses obtained with personal dosimeters were
measured at many residential and occupational sites throughout the study
areas to obtain fundamental data needed for the estimation. The
measurement results indicated that the ratio of individual dose based on
a personal dosimeter to the ambient external dose measurement was 0.7
with 10% uncertainty. Multiplying the ambient external dose by 0.7 may
be an appropriate measure of the effective dose to an individual in the
investigated area. Annual individual doses were estimated for
representative lifestyles and occupations based on the ambient external
dose rates at the measurement sites, taking into account the
relationship between the ambient external dose and individual dose. The
results were as follows: 0.6-2.3 mSv y in Tamura, 1.1-5.5 mSv y in
Kawauchi, and 3.8-17 mSv y in Iitate. For all areas investigated, the
estimated dose to outdoor workers was higher than that to indoor
workers. Identifying ways to reduce the amount of time that an outdoor
worker spends outdoors would provide an effective measure to reduce
dose.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26107433
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