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Showing posts with label Iodide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iodide. Show all posts

Friday, March 18, 2011

Radiation Monitors Have Been Deployed To Multiple Cities In The U.S. By The EPA.


Feds sending radiation monitors to Santa Barbara

Michelle Cole
SANTA BARBARA – 11:03 a.m. – Santa Barbara has been selected by the  Environmental Protection Agency as one of the cities to locate deployable radiation monitors.
“The is in direct response to the nuclear disaster in Japan,” Santa Barbara County Air Pollution Control District Director Terry Dressler told THESBNN Friday.
Japan has been in crisis mode since its 9.0 earthquake and tsunami March 11, 2011 events that damaged nuclear reactors at the Fukushima I plant.
Also as a result of the crisis there and the growing concern on the West Coast over potential radiation exposure, SBCAPCD added a link to its website Thursday calledRadiation and our Health.

(Air pollution monitoring station in Santa Barbara County /PHOTO-SBCAPCD)

The agency has been getting a lot of calls about health threats.
But measuring radiological pollution is not a part of its “charter or mandate,” Dressler said.
Santa Barbara relies on information from the radiation monitoring stations in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

(IMAGE/website)
Dressler said he was contacted by the EPA this week about its new program RadNet, which will deploy additional radiation
monitors filling in the gaps of cities that don’t have them.
The feds will decide where the monitor will be located in Santa Barbara.
“They want to put them where we already have air quality monitoring stations in Santa Barbara and Goleta,” Dressler went on to say, “and they could choose Vandenburg.”
The monitoring station in Santa Barbara is on Canon Perdido; the one is on Fairview in Goleta.
The EPA’s efforts to get the portable monitors out is on a fast track, with shipment expected within days, something Dressler says is a good thing.

This next story is inconsistent with news that I have seen online and on TV reporting that people that have come to America from Japan have tested positive for radiation, as well as their luggage...

U.S. monitors flights from Japan for radiation

The Customs and Border Protection agency said authorities are monitoring inbound flights from Japan for radiation, but neither cargo nor passengers have tested positive for harmful levels. The agency is "is monitoring developments in Japan carefully and is specifically assessing the potential for radiological contamination."


WHO Warns Against Self-Medication as Antidote to Radiation

Bottles of potassium iodide sit on the shelf of the Texas Star Pharmacy in Plano, Texas, March 15, 2011
Photo: AP
Bottles of potassium iodide sit on the shelf of the Texas Star Pharmacy in Plano, Texas, March 15, 2011

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The World Health Organization (WHO) warns against the indiscriminate use of potassium iodide as a precaution against nuclear radiation.  WHO is issuing this advisory following reports of people in Japan and elsewhere who are using the substance in response to radiation leaks from nuclear plants in northeastern Japan.  

The World Health Organization calls self-medication a bad idea.  It says potassium iodide pills are not antidotes for radiation.  The United Nations agency says they do not protect against external radiation, or against any other radioactive substance.

WHO spokesman Gregory Hartl says potassium iodide should be taken only when there is a clear public health recommendation to do so.

"Indiscriminate use of the product can cause side effects such as inflammation of the salivary glands, nausea, rashes, intestinal upset and possible severe allergic reactions," said Hartl.  "It can also interact with other medications, especially certain types of cardiovascular medications such as ACE inhibitors, receptor blockers and potassium-sparing diuretics."  

On another issue, the World Health Organization says it is safe to eat food produced before the nuclear power plant leakage in northeastern Japan occurred.  But it says food grown and harvested in the 30-kilometer exclusion zone after the emergency might be contaminated and should be avoided.  

WHO says there is no reason to restrict travel to Japan, as there are no dangers of nuclear radiation except in the exclusion zone.  The World Meteorological Organization agrees with this assessment.

The Head of WMO's Aeronautical Meteorological Division, Herbert Tuempel, says there is no reason to fear international air travel unless there is a change in the current radiological situation.

"There is a small exclusion zone of a 30-kilometer radius around the plant where there is no traffic allowed - neither marine nor air traffic is allowed into this 30-kilometer radius," noted Tuempel.  "But apart from this very small area, there is no restriction to international air travel."  

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

New Fukushima Fire, Meltdown, Iodide Interest Heightened, Nuclear Fallout Precautions, Warships Redirected, Radiation Towards Tokyo,


Fire breaks out at Japan Fukushima Daiichi No.4 reactor building



(Reuters) - A fire has broken out at the building housing the No.4 reactor of Tokyo Electric Power Co's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the electric utility said on Wednesday.
"That outlook, of course, changed overnight with the escalating nuclear meltdown. The spreading nuclear leak has changed the earthquake from a one day event to a continuing and growing disaster. Where it will end all of a sudden isn't clear. Worse case scenarios, even unlikely ones like the evacuation of Tokyo or nuclear contamination on the US West Coast, are now in play. And that has added the element of uncertainty that is now rocking the market." 


Read more: http://curiouscapitalist.blogs.time.com/2011/03/15/how-far-will-us-stocks-fall-on-japanese-nuclear-concerns/#ixzz1GhyU0qAM

Japan crisis spurs iodide interest in U.S. and Canada







The No.3 nuclear reactor of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant at Minamisoma is seen burning after a blast following an earthquake and tsunami in this handout satellite image taken March 14, 2011. REUTERS/Digital Globe/Handout

SEATTLE | Tue Mar 15, 2011 6:05pm EDT
(Reuters) - Fears of transpacific nuclear fallout fromJapan's reactor crisis has sent consumers scrambling for radiation antidotes across the ocean in the U.S. Pacific Northwest and Canada.
But U.S. and Canadian health authorities said on Tuesday that fears are unwarranted, and warned that people will expose themselves to other medical problems by needlessly taking potassium iodide they hope will protect them from cancer.
Drug stores and holistic clinics in Washington state, Oregon and British Columbia have seen a sharp increase in demand for potassium iodide and other potential antidotes to radiation since the Japanese reactor crisis began.
  •  A friend of mine here in the US says the pharmacy he works at has sold out of potassium iodide tablets! The tablets counteract the effects of radioactive iodine, but we're not in any real risk here. It seems that lots of people get very scared when the word "radioactive" is used and lose all sense.
    comment by Johan at 3:49 PM

    • Illustrated tips on how to protect against a radioactive cloud.
      by Corinne Perkins at 3:46 PM
      FACTBOX: U.S. redirects warships over Japan radiation risk
      (Reuters) - The U.S. military took new steps to shield personnel from radiation spread by Japan's crippled nuclear plant on Tuesday, redirecting arriving warships to safer waters and telling some forces to limit time outdoors.http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/15/us-japan-quake-usa-aid-idUSTRE72E8R620110315

      (Reuters) - Winds over a radiation-leaking nuclear power plant in northern Japan will blow from the north along the Pacific coast early on Wednesday and then from the northwest toward the ocean during the day time, the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

      Tokyo, with population of about 13 million, is located about 240 km (150 miles) southwest of the plant.

      A massive earthquake and tsunami on Friday crippled its cooling functions, forcing operator Tokyo Electric Power Co to put seawater into the reactors, releasing radioactive air into atmosphere, to reduce heat and high pressure inside.

      The direction of the wind is a key factor in judging possible damage to the environment from the radiation.

      Officials said radiation in Tokyo was 10 times normal on Tuesday, when the wind was blowing from the north and northeast.

      (Reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka; Editing by Michael Watson)