Âé¶¹´«Ã½

Letter: Over the top?

Published 16 May 1998

From Rick Haworth

Your article on exposure to radiation in the womb, such as medical X-rays, is
a classic example of why arguments over radiation doses remain in the emotional
rather than the factual arena
(This Week, 18 April, p 4). Bruce Kimler’s
experiment irradiating rat fetuses with “just 62.5 milligrays” (more than 60
times the dose of interest, given that a series of pelvic X-rays on humans gives
a dose of 1 milligray) leads him to believe that even minuscule doses will have
an effect on brain development.

By the same argument I could expose a rat fetus (or an adult, come to that)
to 320 °C and conclude that a 5-degree increase in room temperature could
lead to boiled blood, charred skin and a barbecued appearance in humans.

Using statistics like 2000 out of 100 000 rather than 2 in 100 (or 2 per
cent) is equally emotive and not worthy of a scientific journal that is usually
unbiased.

Tadley, Hampshire

Issue no. 2134 published 16 May 1998

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