| PHILADELPHIA INFANT DEATHS SOAR 48% AFTER MID-MARCH
                  HIGH  LEVELS OF JAPANESE NUCLEAR FALLOUT MAY BE FACTOR June 3, 2011 – Infant deaths have  risen 48% in Philadelphia since mid-March, when  fallout from the meltdowns at Japanese nuclear reactors reached the U.S., according  to data published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Soaring infant deaths occurred as  the highest levels of radiation in drinking water in the nation were found in  Philadelphia by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), raising the  possibility of a link between Japanese radiation and risk of infant death. “The fetus and infant are very  susceptible to the harm caused by radiation,” says Joseph Mangano MPH MBA.  “The Fukushima  meltdowns are still releasing radiation, so trends should be followed,” he  adds.  Mangano is a health researcher,  and Executive Director of the Radiation and Public Health Project, a New  York-based health research group. The radioactive plume from Japan traveled by air and reached the U.S. on March 17, six days after a powerful  earthquake and tsunami caused meltdowns at four reactors at the Fukushima plant.  EPA data shows that the highest U.S. levels of radioactive Iodine-131 (I-131) in  drinking water after March 17 were found in Philadelphia. Philadelphia infant deaths reported to the  CDC averaged 5.0 per week for the five weeks ending March 19.  The average jumped to 7.4, a 48.0% increase,  in the following 10 weeks.  The increase  was statistically significant.  U.S. infant  deaths increased 2.3%.  The 74 deaths in  the 10-week period were well above similar periods in 2009 and 2010. Infant mortality data are from  CDC publication Morbidity and Mortality  Weekly Report.  They are preliminary  statistics (final figures are not available until 2014), but preliminary trends  are often similar to final ones. The highest levels of I-131 in  drinking water found by EPA were in two Philadelphia  stations (Queen and Belmont) of 2.2 and 1.3 picocuries per liter of water.  All but one of the dozens of other  measurements around the nation was below 0.7.   I-131 is one of over 100 radioactive chemicals found only in nuclear  reactors and atomic bombs. The CDC data can be accessed at http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/mmwr_wk/wk_cvol.html;  EPA data is at http://www.epa.gov/japan2011/rert/radnet_sampling_data.html#milk. Health researchers at the  Radiation and Public Health Project (www.radiation.org) have published 27  medical journal articles and 7 books on health risks of radiation exposure.                                     PhiladelphiaWeek Ending              Infant  Deaths
 BEFORE JAPAN FALLOUT ARRIVES 
                    
                      | February 19, 2011 |   3 |  
                      | February 26, 2011 | 13 |  
                      | March 5, 2011 |   3 |  
                      | March 12, 2011 |   3 |  
                      | March 19, 2011 |   3 |  AFTER JAPAN FALLOUT ARRIVES 
                    
                      | March 26, 2011 | 12 |  
                      | April 2, 2011 |   6 |  
                      | April 9, 2011 | 10 |  
                      | April 16, 2011 |   1 |  
                      | April 23, 2011 |   7 |  
                      | April 30, 2011 |   7 |  
                      | May 7, 2011 |   4 |  
                      | May 14, 2011 |   7 |  
                      | May 21, 2011 | 15 |  
                      | May 28, 2011 |   5 |    Total Deaths (Weekly Average) 
                    
                      | Before Japan Fallout
 | 25 (5.0) |  
                      | After Japan Fallout | 74 (7.4) |  
                      | % Change in Average |     +48.0% |  Source: U.S. Centers  for Disease Control and Prevention.   Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.  http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/mmwr_wk/wk_cvol.html.   Iodine-131 in Drinking WaterHighest Levels in U.S.,  March/April 2011
 
                    
                      | Location | Date | I-131 Level |  
                      | Philadelphia (Queen) | April 4 |     2.20 |  
                      | Philadelphia (Belmont) | April 14 |     1.90 |  
                      | Chattanooga TN | March 28 |     1.60 |  
                      | Philadelphia (Belmont) | April 4 |     1.30 |  
                      | Philadelphia (Queen) | April 14 |     1.20 |  
                      | Oak Ridge TN | March 29 |     0.63 |  
                      | Philadelphia (Baxter) | April  4 |     0.46 |    Source: U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency: RADNET Sampling System. http://www.epa.gov/japan2011/rert/radnet_sampling_data.html#milk   |