| Is the Dramatic Increase in Baby Deaths in the US a Result of Fukushima Fallout? By JANETTE D. SHERMAN, MDand JOSEPH MANGANO
 U.S. babies are dying at an  increased rate. While the United States spends billions on medical care, as of  2006, the US ranked 28th in the world in infant mortality, more than twice that  of the lowest ranked countries.  (DHHS,  CDC, National Center for Health Statistics.  Health United States  2010, Table 20, p. 131, February 2011.) 
 The recent CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report indicates  that eight cities in the northwest U.S. (Boise ID, Seattle WA, Portland OR,  plus the northern California cities of Santa Cruz, Sacramento, San Francisco,  San Jose, and Berkeley) reported the following data on deaths among those  younger than one year of age:
 
 4 weeks ending March 19, 2011 - 37 deaths (avg. 9.25 per  week)
 10 weeks ending May 28, 2011  - 125 deaths (avg.12.50 per week)
 
 This amounts to an increase of 35% (the total for the entire U.S.  rose about 2.3%), and is statistically significant.   Of further  significance is that those dates include the four weeks before and the ten  weeks after the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant disaster.  In 2001 the  infant mortality was 6.834 per 1000 live births, increasing to 6.845 in 2007.  All years from 2002 to 2007 were higher than the 2001 rate.
 
 Spewing from the Fukushima reactor are radioactive isotopes  including those of iodine (I-131), strontium (Sr-90) and cesium (Cs-134 and  Cs-137) all of which are taken up in food and water.  Iodine is  concentrated in the thyroid, Sr-90 in bones and teeth and Cs-134 and Cs-137 in  soft tissues, including the heart.  The unborn and babies are more  vulnerable because the cells are rapidly dividing and the delivered dose is  proportionally larger than that delivered to an adult.
 
 Data from Chernobyl, which exploded 25 years ago, clearly shows  increased numbers of sick and weak newborns and increased numbers of deaths in  the unborn and newborns, especially soon after the meltdown.  These  occurred in Europe as well as the former Soviet Union. Similar findings are  also seen in wildlife living in areas with increased radioactive fallout  levels.
 
 (Chernobyl – Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and  the Environment,  Alexeiy    V. Yablokov,  Vasily B. Nesterenko, and Alexey V. Nesterenko.  Consulting Editor:   Janette D. Sherman-Nevinger. New York Academy of Sciences, 2009.)
 
 Levels of radioisotopes were measured in children who had died in  the Minsk area that had received Chernobyl fallout.  The cardiac findings  were the same as those seen in test animals that had been administered  Cs-137.  Bandashevsky, Y. I, Pathology of Incorporated Ionizing Radiation,  Belarus Technical University, Minsk. 136 pp., 1999.  For his pioneering  work, Prof. Bandashevsky was arrested in 2001 and imprisoned for five years of  an eight year sentence.
 
 The national low-weight (under 2500 grams, or 5.5 lbs) rate has  risen 23% from 1984 to 2006.  Nearly 400,000 infants are born under 2500g  each year in the U.S.  Most of the increase in infant mortality is  due  specifically to infants born weighing less than 750 grams (I lb 10  1/2 oz).  Multiple births commonly result in underweight babies, but most  of the increase in births at less than 750 grams occurred among singletons and  among mothers 20-34 years of age.  (CDC, National Vital Statistics Report,  52 (12): 1-24, 2005.)
 
 From an obstetrical point of view, women in the age bracket 20 to  34 are those most physically able to deliver a healthy child.  So what has  gone wrong?   Clues to causation are often revealed when there is a  change in incidence, a suspicious geographical distribution, and/or an increase  in hazards known to adversely affect health and development.
 
 The risk of having a baby with birth defects is estimated at three  to four of every 100 babies born.  As of 2005, the Institute of medicine  estimated the cost of pre-term births in the US at more than $2.6 billion, or  $51,600 for each infant.
 
 Low birth weight babies, born too soon and too small, face a  lifetime of health problems, including cerebral palsy, and behavioral and  learning problems placing an enormous physical, emotional and economic burdens  on society as a whole and on those caring for them.  Death of a young  child is devastating to a family.
 
 As of June 5, 2011, The  Japan Times reported that radiation in the No. 1 plant was measured  at 4,000 milliseverts per hour.  To put that in perspective, a worker  would receive a maximal “permissible” dose in 4 minutes.  In addition  there are over 40,000 tons of radioactive water under that reactor with more  radioactivity escaping into the air and sea.  Fuel rods are believed to  have melted and sunk to the bottom of reactors 1, 2, and  3.
 
 Tepco, the corporate owner took more than two months to confirm  the meltdowns and admitted lying about the levels of destruction and subsequent  contamination, resulting in “Public Distrust.” Over 100,000 tons of radioactive waste are on the site.
 
 Why should we care if there may be is a link between Fukushima and  the death of children?  Because we need to measure the actual levels of  isotopes in the environment and in the bodies of people exposed to determine if  the fallout is killing our most vulnerable.  The research is not  technically difficult – the political and economic barriers may be  greater.  Bandshevsky and others did it and confirmed the  connection.  The information is available in the Chernobyl book.   (Previously cited.)
 
 The biological findings of Chernobyl cannot be ignored:   isotope incorporation will determine the future of all life on earth – animal,  fish, bird, plant and human.  It is crucial to know this information if we  are to avoid further catastrophic damage.
 
 
 Janette D. Sherman, M.  D. is the author of Life's Delicate Balance: Causes and Prevention of Breast  Cancer and  Chemical Exposure and Disease, and is a specialist in internal  medicine and toxicology. She edited the book Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and  Nature, written by A. V. Yablokov, V. B., Nesterenko and A. V.  Nesterenko, published by the New York Academy of Sciences in 2009.  Her  primary interest is the prevention of illness through public education.   She can be reached at:  toxdoc.js@verizon.net   and www.janettesherman.com
 
 Joseph Mangano is an epidemiologist, and  Executive Director of the Radiation and Public  Health Project research group.
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