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The Little Pill That Could Protect Your Health in a Nuclear Accident, and Why It's NOT Readily Available to Everyone in the U.S.

by Mary Shomon

Iodine-131 is the radioactive gas that was released in the Chernobyl nuclear accident in 1986. Radioactive iodine becomes airborne, and post-Chernobyl exposure to this gas in the Ukraine, Russia, Belarus and areas of Eastern Europe has resulted in a 10-fold increase in thyroid cancer in children in the region, and a quadrupling of adult rates of thyroid cancer.

While residents of the area around Chernobyl are still suffering from exposure, some regions of Eastern Europe that were exposed to radiation were prepared, and were able to protect their residents from the thyroid dangers of iodine-131.

The key? Potassium iodide, (also called potassium iodine) an inexpensive drug that, when given within around 24 hours of exposure, prevents the thyroid from uptake of the radiation, and ultimately, from the increased dangers of thyroid disease and thyroid cancer due to iodine-131 exposure. Potassium iodide was handed out in Poland after the Chernobyl crisis, and this action was credited with protecting the Polish people from increased thyroid problems now being seen in Russia, the Ukraine and Belarus.

In the United States, since the Three Mile Island Nuclear Accident two decades ago, there has been an controversial and ongoing debate about making potassium iodide available to residents in the event of nuclear emergency.

Physicians from the National Institutes of Health and the American Thyroid Association have supported stockpiling. The World Health Organization is in favor of stockpiling in areas with nuclear reactors, and Japan, Canada, France and Russia all have stockpiled potassium iodide. In most European countries -- including Germany, Sweden, Britain -- potassium iodide is handed out to households in areas around nuclear plants, and is available in central locations and emergency facilities for rapid distribution.

Reports indicate that some of the workers and residents at risk in the area around Tokaimura received the protective pills in the time after the accident.

In the U.S., the nuclear power industry, afraid to increase the public's fear of a nuclear accident, accident, has consistently opposed stockpiling. After resisting the move for years, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) finally agreed several years ago that stockpiling could help protect public health in the event of an emergency, and planned to purchase potassium iodide for any state that wanted to stockpile it. The NRC later changed its position, claiming that it did not have sufficient budget to do so. The NRC asked the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to cover the costs, but FEMA said it wasn't authorized to pay. The funding for potassium iodide stockpiling is still up in the air, and a number of states with nuclear facilities have no provisions for distribution of potassium iodide in the event of an iodine-131 nuclear release.

How YOU Can Get Potassium Iodide

Potassium Iodide is not a prescription medication, and if you want to have some in your house in case of emergency, you can purchase it yourself, and keep it on hand in the event that there's a nuclear accident and there is an advisory to take the pills. See the information on Potassium Iodide Tablets and where to buy them at Ki4u.com.

At present, Tennessee, Alabama, Arizona, Maine, California, and Ohio do stockpile some potassium iodide pills in the areas around and downwind from nuclear power plants.

Are You At Risk?

States with Commercial Nuclear Reactors

Alabama
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Connecticut
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
Iowa
Kansas
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Nebraska
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New York
North Carolina
Ohio
Pennsylvania
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
Wisconsin


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