Invisible Enemy: Health Epidemiology of Radiation Exposure
MTA
Population-level studies, methodologies, and policy implications for long-term health monitoring
2nd Edition
"Invisible Enemy: Health Epidemiology of Radiation Exposure" provides a comprehensive overview of radiation epidemiology, detailing the methodologies, challenges, and policy implications for long-term health monitoring of radiation exposure. The book begins by establishing the foundational understanding of radiation physics and biology relevant to public health, explaining how ionizing radiation interacts with living systems to cause damage, and how different types and doses of radiation impact biological outcomes. It then delves into the critical processes of identifying exposure pathways and sources, encompassing natural background radiation, medical applications, occupational hazards, and environmental contamination from nuclear incidents.
A central theme is the meticulous science of dosimetry and dose reconstruction, which forms the quantitative link between exposure and health effects. The text thoroughly examines various study designs—cohort, case-control, and hybrid—highlighting their strengths and weaknesses in investigating radiation-related diseases with long latency periods. It also dedicates significant attention to the pervasive issues of bias, confounding, measurement error, and uncertainty quantification, emphasizing the critical need for robust statistical methods and transparent reporting to ensure credible risk estimates, especially for low-dose exposures.
The book explores the application of these epidemiological principles across diverse populations and scenarios, including occupational cohorts, medically exposed patients and providers, communities affected by environmental contamination (like Chernobyl and Fukushima), and populations exposed to natural sources such as radon. Special consideration is given to sensitive populations, including children and those exposed prenatally, underscoring their heightened vulnerability. Emerging scientific tools like biomarkers, biodosimetry, and "omics" technologies are presented as promising avenues for more precise exposure assessment and understanding individual radiosensitivity.
Finally, the text addresses the crucial translation of scientific evidence into public health action. It details the role of registries, surveillance systems, and data linkage for long-term monitoring, rapid assessment in emergencies, and the ethical considerations surrounding data privacy and governance. The economic aspects of radiation protection, including cost-effectiveness analysis and policy evaluation, are explored, alongside the intricate landscape of international standards and comparative national regulations. The book concludes by stressing the ongoing need for implementing preventive health policies and continuous monitoring to effectively manage the complex and long-lasting risks posed by this "invisible enemy."
This book is designed for public health officials, researchers, and practitioners working in radiation protection, environmental health, occupational health, and medical radiation fields. It provides a coherent framework for designing studies, assessing exposure, and building sustainable surveillance systems. The content is particularly valuable for professionals needing to translate epidemiological evidence into preventive health policy and those involved in long-term health monitoring of radiation-exposed populations.
January 23, 2026
72,494 words
5 hours 5 minutes
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