Dose assessments were required for the epidemiological study of residents living near nuclear power plants. In the present work, environmental pathway models have been applied to estimate radiation doses to residents living near the nuclear power plants in Taiwan. Best estimates of doses were made for residents by their age groups in different compass sectors centered at the nuclear power plants. In each sector, radiation doses were assessed using the averaged environmental, consumption and lifestyle data. For epidemiological analyses of cancer risks in different organs or tissues, individual organ absorbed doses were assessed for both the airborne and waterborne effluent releases. Such assessments were performed based on the historic data, including measured effluent releases, detected meteorological parameters, and surveyed data on the production and consumption of local agricultural, fishery and livestock products, etc. Exposure pathways consisted of the external irradiations from air submersion, ground deposition and water immersion plus the internal irradiations from inhalation and ingestion. Age-dependent annual intakes and occupancy time were locally surveyed. Dose conversion coefficients were taken from published data after International Commission on Radiological Protection Publication 60. Annual doses and cumulated doses during residence were assessed and examined for their dependence on age, organ and compass sector.
Date:
2020-12
Relation:
Journal of Environmental Radioactivity. 2020 Dec;225:Article number 106443.