I was searching for the new
autism diagnostic rate and discovered that California has a significant
increase in autism incidents among kindergartners:
Reese, Phillip. July 18 2016. Autism rates in California public schools jumped 7 percent in 2016. Sacramento Bee, http://www.sacbee.com/site-services/databases/article90300877.html#storylink=cpyThe increase was especially sharp among kindergartners, where autism cases grew by 17 percent last year [2015]. More than one of every 65 kindergartners in California public schools is classified as autistic
To
reiterate, the article is reporting that autism cases grew 17% in
kindergartners in 2015.
Wow!
While some experts will attribute the increase to more screening, I wonder
whether the increase is linked to Fukushima fallout.
Ernest J. Sternglass and Steven Bell argued in 1983 that
radioactive iodine from nuclear fallout could impact cognitive development in
the womb and early infancy:
Ernest J. Sternglass and Steven Bell. 1983. Fallout and SAT Scores: Evidence for Cognitive Damage during Early Infancy. The Phi Delta Kappan, Vol. 64, No. 8 (Apr., 1983), pp. 539-545. Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20386800 Accessed: 12-10-2016 17:25 UTC[exceroted] This fallout acts on the thyroid of the developing fetus in the mother's womb and during infancy, when the thyroid is known to control the development of cognitive functions. In this article we will present the most recent evidence sup porting this hypothesis, as contained in newly available state-by-state data on SAT scores and data collected by the U.S. Public Health Service on radioactive fission products in pasteurized milk (p. 539)
In 1962, Harold Knapp described how
radioiodine from a single deposition in pasture-land bioaccumulates and
biomagnifies, producing substantial and injurious radiation doses for children consuming
milk.[i]
Declassified NRC transcripts of conference
calls that occurred on 17 March 2011 concerning Fukushima fallout reveal that
the agency had projections of a 40 millisievert (annualized) dose to the thyroid from
radioactive iodine for a one-year old child in California:
‘The DITTRA result was four rem [40,000 microsieverts or 40 millisieverts] to the thyroid of a one year-old child based on one year integration of uptake.’[ii]
Parents in North America were
not warned about the dangers of radioactive iodine in dairy products.
California
children born in 2010 would have been exposed to Fukushima fallout of
radioiodine (I-29, I-131, I-133) and other radionuclides in early infancy. According to Wikipedia there are 37 known isotopes of iodine and all are radioactive except for 127 (Isotopoes of Iodine Wikipedia).
Radioiodine wasn't the only radioactive element that came down in Fukushima's black rain. Strontium, in particular, can be accumulated in the brain as a substitute for calcium.
Radioiodine wasn't the only radioactive element that came down in Fukushima's black rain. Strontium, in particular, can be accumulated in the brain as a substitute for calcium.
Hence, it
is possible that the uptick in autism diagnoses could be explained in part by
Fukushima fallout.
Fukushima impacts could be investigated in two ways:
1. Thyroid screening of California children diagnosed with autism or PDD
2. Baby teeth screening for radiostrontium, which bioaccumulates in teeth and bones
1. Thyroid screening of California children diagnosed with autism or PDD
2. Baby teeth screening for radiostrontium, which bioaccumulates in teeth and bones
Of
course, thyroid anomalies cannot be proven to have been caused by Fukushima
(see Japan as the case example on this matter).
But
higher rates of thyroid anomalies when correlated with evidence of
radiostrontium in baby teeth would provide enough circumstantial evidence to force public attention to potentially catastrophic health (and environmental) effects
from our increasingly radioactive and toxic environment.
It is imperative that potential Fukushima fallout effects be investigated by impartial actors who will conduct impartial science (to the extent possible) to investigate health and reproductive effects across generations.
I am not convinced that this happening in Japan (via the Fukushima Health Management Survey) and it is most definitely not happening in the US despite evidence collected by the US Geological Survey of Fukushima fallout throughout the western US.
[i] S. Kirsch (2004) ‘Harold Knapp and the Geography of Normal Controversy: Radioiodine in the Historical Environment’, Osiris, 19, 167-181.
[ii] U.S Nuclear Regulatory Commission (17 March 2011) ‘Official Transcript of Proceedings of Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi ET Audio File’, http://pbadupws.nrc.gov/docs/ML1205/ML12052A109.pdf, p. 187, date accessed November 5, 2012.
I agree. We have a problem with this society which does not want to know what the case is as that might undermine profits of some corporation; or put a government in a bad light. Now with mandatory vaccinations in place it will become even more difficult to figure things out as there will be few children who were not vaccinated in CA. So we have Fukushima, vaccinations, and food containing among other things glyphosate. Faced with this I would suggest that potential parents find a better environment before having children. It may be the difference between a healthy child and one with physical and mental problems of some severity. Potential parents might need to emigrate to a better environment and endure all the problems that go with that.
ReplyDeleteWell, we maybe can argue about energy-sources are limited or not,
Deletebut, we won`t argue
about the limitations of 1 earth, right ?!
Really excellent article Majia! Autism and radiation have been covered-up a long time. A cousin and a friend were born by Hanford in the sixties. No autism in the families. The Cousin is autistic. The friend is asperger. Born close to same time in eastern Washington. I think the link of radiation to neurodevelopmental problems has been suppressed a long time.
ReplyDeleteNewborn baby deaths significantly increased in areas radioactively polluted by Fukushima nuclear disaster
ReplyDeletehttps://nuclear-news.net/2016/10/12/newborn-baby-deaths-significantly-increased-in-areas-radioactively-polluted-by-fukushima-nuclear-disaster/
Great link. Thank you. I'll read the study today.
DeleteDr merciless says there are inflammation markers for autism as there are with st arthritis and depression Majia
ReplyDeleteDr.MERCOLA. sorry
ReplyDeleteSome people will point the finger at vaccinations, some will point at Fukishima, and Hanford is a local problem for my area. Both are valid contributors, and determining which cause is more at fault than the other is going to surely differ between individuals and their exposure amounts.
ReplyDeleteI would just like to point out a third option, as Dr. Klinghardt has a good video at https://youtu.be/b_wxM6IAF1I
He draws a direct connection between the exposure of the mother to electric fields, as a major factor in predicting autism in the child to be born.
Also, 80% of all health problems now are caused or contributed to by man-made electromagnetic radiation.
You have to realize that parents of these kids in California could have been affected by the aerial and ground spraying of pesticides that went on for a solid 10 years in Southern Ca and Northern Ca for another 5 or more years and on even today . Pesticides lodge in a man's semen and transfer into the woman who passes it on the the next generation and the one following that on infinitum. Pesticides are a nerve poison. Autism is a neurological disease.
ReplyDelete