Walker J S
US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC. 20555.
JAMA. 1989 Aug 4;262(5):664-8.
The hazards of ionizing radiation have aroused concern since a short time after the discovery of x-rays and natural radioactivity in the 1890s. Misuse of x-rays and radium prompted efforts to encourage radiation safety and to set limits on exposure, culminating in the first recommended "tolerance doses" in 1934. After World War II, the problems of radiation protection became more complex because of the growing number of people subjected to radiation injury and the creation of radioactive elements that had never existed before the achievement of atomic fission. Judging the hazards of radiation became a matter of spirited controversy. Major public debates over the dangers of radioactive fallout from atmospheric bomb testing in the 1950s and early 1960s and the risks of nuclear power generation in later periods focused attention on the uncertainties about the consequences of exposure to low-level radiation and the difficulties of resolving them.
自19世纪90年代X射线和天然放射性被发现后不久,电离辐射的危害就引起了人们的关注。X射线和镭的滥用促使人们努力推动辐射安全并设定暴露限值,最终在1934年提出了首个推荐的“耐受剂量”。第二次世界大战后,由于遭受辐射伤害的人数不断增加以及在实现原子裂变之前从未存在过的放射性元素的产生,辐射防护问题变得更加复杂。判断辐射危害成为了一个激烈争论的问题。20世纪50年代和60年代初关于大气核弹试验产生的放射性沉降物的危险以及后期核能发电风险的重大公众辩论,将人们的注意力集中在低水平辐射暴露后果的不确定性以及解决这些不确定性的困难上。