| X-RAYS CAUSE
CANCER: But then, they always have
X-rays cause 700 cases of cancer every year in the UK, around
5700 in the USA, and a total of 18,500 cases overall in
15 developed countries, a new study has found.
Cancer risks per cumulative x-ray exposure range from just
0.6 per cent in Poland and the UK, and up to 3.2 per cent
in Japan, the highest. The USA has a cancer risk of
0.9 per cent.
The findings, made by Oxford University, should come as
no great surprise. Radiation is a known carcinogen,
and medical x-rays represent 14 per cent of total radiation
exposure. A study produced back in 1981 confirmed
that 0.5 per cent of all cancer deaths in the USA were caused
by x-rays.
Despite that early warning, x-rays have been increasingly
used, and it's doubtful just how many are necessary.
It's been reckoned that 30 per cent of chest x-rays are
of no medical benefit, but are carried out as a routine
procedure.
Doctors were quick to reassure the public that x-rays are
essential, and that there benefit far outweighs any cancer
risk. "We have very strict regulations to make
sure we are only giving x-rays and CT examinations to those
who need them," said Prof Adrian Dixon of Addenbrooke's
Hospital in Cambridge.
So let's hope that, after these latest findings, they start
sticking to them.
(Source: The Lancet, 2004; 363: 345-51).
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