• J Toxicol Env Heal A · Apr 2006

    Dosimetric challenges for residential radon epidemiology.

    • Daniel J Steck and R William Field.
    • Physics Department, St. John's University, Collegeville, Minnesota 56321, USA. dsteck@csbsju.edu
    • J Toxicol Env Heal A. 2006 Apr 1;69(7):655-64.

    AbstractRadon concentration alone may not be an adequate surrogate to measure for lung cancer risk in all residential radon epidemiologic lung cancer studies. The dose delivered to the lungs per unit radon exposure can vary significantly with exposure conditions. These dose-effectiveness variations can be comparable to spatial and temporal factor variations in many situations. New technologies that use surface-deposited and implanted radon progeny activities make more accurate dose estimates available for future epidemiologic studies.

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