Radiation Doses in Perspective
Health Effects
Radiation Doses in Perspective
Recent news reports from Japan have made frequent references to radiation measurements and doses. A dose is the amount of radiation energy absorbed by the body.
Units of Measure
Japan measures radiation dose in the metric system unit of Sieverts (Sv). The press in Japan has reported doses in milliSieverts (mSv). A milliSievert is one thousandth of a Sievert (1000 mSv = 1 Sv). The United States’ unit of a measurement for radiation dose is the rem (Roentgen Equivalent Man). In the U.S., doses are most commonly reported in millirem (mrem). A millirem is one thousandth of a rem (1000 mrem = 1 rem).
Converting Sieverts to rems is easy. One sievert equals 100 rem. (1 Sv = 100 rem). One milliSievert equals one hundred millrems (1 mSv = 100 millrems).
Average U.S. Radiation Doses and Sources
All of us are exposed to radiation every day, both from natural sources such minerals in the ground, and from man-made sources such as medical x-rays. According to the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement, the average annual radiation dose per person in the U.S. is 620 millirem (6.2 millisieverts). The pie chart below shows the sources of this average dose.
Half of our average dose comes from natural background sources: cosmic radiation from space, naturally occurring radioactive minerals in the ground and in your body, and from the radioactive gasses radon and thoron, which are created when other naturally occurring elements undergo radioactive decay. Another 48 percent of our dose comes from medical diagnostics and treatments.
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Radiation Doses in Perspecitve | Radiation Protection | US EPA
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