Radon Gas Detection / Mitigation Video

Yaj Yak

Gladys
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May 24, 2007
122,701
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RadonInfographic-1000.png
 

Yaj Yak

Gladys
TCG Premium
May 24, 2007
122,701
89,120
Niche score of 2,363
https://www.nytimes.com/1991/03/29/us/us-overestimates-peril-of-radon-in-homes-new-study-says.html


A new study suggests that Americans are exposed to only about a third as much radon inside their homes as monitoring devices indicate, and that many have probably spent money needlessly to get rid of the gas.

The Environmental Protection Agency has recommended that homeowners put radon monitors in their basements, where levels of the odorless gas are probably the highest. But the study, presented here Wednesday at a meeting sponsored by the American Cancer Society, concluded that human exposure was about 30 percent of the radon levels found in the basements. It is the first study to see how much radon people are exposed, as opposed to how much is found in part of a house.

"I don't think you should remediate a home based on basement levels," said Dr. Naomi H. Harley, a radiological expert at New York University Medical Center, who conducted the study. "A single basement reading is not representative of personal exposure." A Cause of Lung Cancer

Radon, released in the decay of radium, is present in soils and rocks in many places and can seep into homes, reaching dangerous levels in unventilated spaces. The environmental agency estimates that radon gas causes 20,000 cases of lung cancer a year in the United States. The figure is based on lung cancer rates among miners who are exposed to high levels.

The agency has recommended that vents and fans be installed in homes with high levels. This work costs about $1,000. Based on basement readings, the agency has estimated that about 20 percent of homes in the United States should have radon vents.

"It's just not believable that there are that many homes that need remediation," Dr. Harley said. Based on her study, she said the figure would be about 7 percent.

A spokeswoman for the environmental agency, Martha Casey, said officials there had not seen Dr. Harley's study. "We certainly are very willing to examine these studies," she said. "And we may eventually revise our risk estimate numbers." 52 Houses Studied in Illinois

Dr. Harley's study was conducted in 52 houses in DuPage County, Illinois. Family members wore personal monitors, which were developed for the study, and also placed ordinary radon detectors in rooms throughout their homes.

Participants wore the monitors at all times for about three weeks. Dr. Harley found that stationary detectors on the first floor recorded the most accurate radon levels in the house. But personal exposure was only about 70 percent of these first-floor readings.

Dr. Harley said her personal radon monitors were not commercially available. The room testers are widely sold, typically for $10 to $20. She recommended that they be placed in the first-floor living area. An exception, she said, is basement bedrooms.

The environmental agency has recommended that corrective action be taken in homes where where there are more than 4 picocuries of radon per liter of air. Extended exposure to concentrations above 20 picocuries per liter of air poses a far greater risk, the agency says, warranting corrective action within months. And at levels above 200 picocuries per liter, immediate measures are called for.

Of 100 people spending 75 percent of their time for 70 years in a house with 4 picocuries of radon per liter of air, 1 to 5 would die of lung cancer as a result, the agency says.
 

Bruce Jibboo

TCG Elite Member
Apr 18, 2008
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Elgin
The EPA wanted to keep their 11 Billion dollar radon budget in the mid 90's.

Once you understand association, correlation, and causation the only thing you'll worry about regarding Radon is test results to show some idiot buyer.

I think all it takes is having a candle lit to actually pass the tests too. :rofl:
 

Yaj Yak

Gladys
TCG Premium
May 24, 2007
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heh


https://www.acsh.org/news/2015/11/13/dont-fear-radon-concerns-at-home-theyre-overblown



There is fear circulating about the risk of lung cancer due to inhaled radon gas, as a result of the widespread publicity given to studies that link lung cancer incidence to radon concentration using a "linear no-threshold" (LNT) model. This model which many scientists say is baseless and should be scrapped predicts an alarming excess of cancers, even at low radon levels.

Little publicity, however, has been given to the studies that actually measured home radon levels and examined the lung cancer incidence of the residents. And that should change.

Dr. Jerry M. Cuttler, a radiation expert and advisor to the American Council on Science and Health, has co-authored a paper entitled "Threshold for Radon-Induced Lung Cancer From Inhaled Plutonium Data," along with Charles L. Sanders. It was recently published in the journal Dose-Response. Dr. Cuttler points out that measured radon levels and cancer outcomes document, in fact, a significant decrease below the natural incidence of lung cancer. These observations contradict the predictions made using the LNT dose-response model.

In their article, the authors outline a rather complex series of calculations to demonstrate how the unscientific LNT dogma, established during the early years of the nuclear age, is. And it's been etched in stone, as it were, by the "radiation protection industry" and its official agency, the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP), since the 1950s. Why?

The change came because of strong political pressure by scientists and other influential people to create a social fear of low radiation from A-bomb testing during the arms race and abhorrence of nuclear war, according to Dr. Cuttler, in the 2013 Canadian Nuclear Society Bulletin.

Enter ICRP and its LNT assumption. Suddenly, safe levels of maximum annual occupational and public exposures were set at 50 and 5 mSv, respectively, and later reduced to 20 and 1 mSv. Some experts have noted the irony that if adhered to stringently, these tolerance levels would mandate that Denver and many other places should be evacuated immediately, since both the global average and the average dose in Denver are 3 mSv per year.

It is the LNT model which has popularized the common myth that radiation is unsafe at any dose, despite the frequent counterpoints by nuclear experts such as renowned Swedish radiobiologist Gunnar Walinder. In 1995, he said, The LNT hypothesis is a primitive, unscientific idea that cannot be justified by current scientific understanding. As practiced by the modern radiation protection community, the LNT hypothesis is one of the greatest scientific scandals of our time.

The unscientific, political basis of the LNT model has led to such ironies as this: After the Fukushima earthquake and tsunami, Japan lowered its radiation tolerance standards to the point that it has effectively banned bananas (which contain radioactive potassium) and Brazil nuts (which contain radium).

Arbitrary standards such as these ignore thousands of studies disproving LNT and demonstrating radiation s hormetic effect that a "toxic" exposure at high levels can be beneficial at lower doses. Hormesis applies to radiation, too. Dr. Cuttler has asserted that no harmful health effects have ever been detected in high natural radiation background areas, most notably (for the American Council, anyway) in his publication, "Nuclear Energy and Health, and the Benefits of Low-level Radiation Hormesis." Compared to average-dose regions, rates of both cancer and congenital disease are consistently decreased, rather than increased.

Drs. Cuttler and Sanders conclude their plea for science-based home radon assessments thusly: "The EPA action level for reducing radon in homes is 14 times lower than the 'No Observed Adverse Effect Level' (NOAEL) estimated in this article. The very low action level has been causing undue fear and unwarranted costs to many homeowners as well as a reduction in the market prices of their radon-stigmatized homes. It should also be noted that radon remediation significantly increases lung cancer mortality. To dispel the fear and eliminate this economic burden, the action level should be raised by a factor of at least seven, where the health benefit is near optimum."

And not to ignore the roiling controversy over "sustainable" or "clean" energy as a contributor to the fight against global warming, another point of view must be given credence: "Anti-nuclear activists and nuclear disarmament proponents cling to the discredited LNT hypothesis, sacrificing lives and economies for the sake of an imprudent political agenda. The ICRP website admits that its International System of Radiologic Protection is based in part on 'value judgments' that 'take into account societal expectations, ethics and experience gained in application of the system.' They do not explain how it is ethical to mislead society with a disproven hypothesis, no matter their success in applying such propaganda over the past 50-plus years, instead of frightening the public with nuclear science fiction."
 

Bruce Jibboo

TCG Elite Member
Apr 18, 2008
19,791
155
Elgin
Yup lemmmeee find it.. Trust me I fuckin drank the kooliad too, and even have an uncle who has a radon mitigation company for couple decades now.. I actually did the research and watched all these videos on this link.

Very outdated looking website, but the best site I've come across from a science perspective without being "too scientific" for us norms to understand.

http://www.forensic-applications.com/radon/radon.html

honestly didn't even read everything on this website, he does however cover it all in the videos at the bottom.
 
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