Oy, I see that Congress is going to have hearings on the radiation hormesis thesis, and the EPA is (contrary to most scientific and NAS opinion) recommending that low-levels of radiation be less regulated.https://apnews.com/6a573b6b020e453c90ecd5e84aa23f57?utm_medium=AP&utm_source=Twitter&utm_campaign=SocialFlow&__twitter_impression=true …
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While thinking about who the hormesis model benefits, and who funds this research, run Ed Calabrese's name through the Tobacco Industry Legacy Docs database. https://www.industrydocumentslibrary.ucsf.edu/tobacco/results/#q=calabrese&h=%7B%22hideDuplicates%22%3Atrue%2C%22hideFolders%22%3Atrue%7D&subsite=tobacco&cache=true&count=1912 …
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I hate getting in discussions about hormesis, as an aside, because non-scientists are easily suckered into the hormesis agenda (because they like to believe it might be true, or something), and don't realize how skimpy the evidence is.
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Hormesis advocates have done a good job of making it seem, on the Internet, like this is a mainstream idea. My discussions with, and readings of, health physicists and geneticists, suggest it is not at all.
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Compounding this is that most people DO have a pretty terrible understanding about the risks of radiation, so it's easy to fall into the trap of, "most people exaggerate it, so maybe people on the total other side of the spectrum are right!" Which is just a cognitive error.
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The people I talk to who don't seem to have an ideological dog in this fight and who are informed are generally of the "LNT seems to work pretty well; the newer, larger datasets in the last few years seem to back it up; the hormesis people vastly overstate their case" view.
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Nobody asserts that we totally understand the effects of very-low level radiation, but the LNT thesis assumes that in our ignorance, we should be wary about exposing large populations to low levels of radioactivity. The hormesis thesis instead assumes we can be cavalier about it.
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Replying to @wellerstein
We already do expose large populations to low-level radiation. There are lots of places in the world with what we could consider to be elevated levels of radioactivity. Like Denver, for example.
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Replying to @RadicalGoats @wellerstein
This is an article about places with high natural radioactivity - including cities like Ramsar, Iran.https://science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/earth/geology/hot-not-what-makes-some-places-naturally-high-radioactivity.htm …
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Cancer is complicated, and so is epidemology. A "HowStuffworks" treatment that only quotes industry lobbyists, doesn't quite cut it for me, sorry. It shouldn't cut it for you, either.
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Replying to @wellerstein @RadicalGoats
How about opinion of RADARsoftware authors and author of https://www.amazon.com/Michael-G.-Stabin/e/B001JRTJZK … (N.Stabin)? http://www.doseinfo-radar.com/LNT.html More https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4917595/ … And recent (different authors) http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1559325818796331 … I wouldnt take iangoddard as scientific source, nonetheless its interesting
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