How did Fukushima affect humans?
In more than 140 papers, he and colleagues have documented the relatively low radiation exposure of Fukushima residents and the health impacts of the evacuation—a high death toll among the elderly, increases in chronic diseases, and a decline in general well-being.
What health effects did Chernobyl have on humans?
The Chernobyl-exposed populations showed many of the symptoms that commonly appear following a traumatic accident or event: stress, depression, anxiety (including post-traumatic stress symptoms), medically unexplained physical symptoms, and subjective poor health.
How did the Chernobyl explosion impact the environment?
After the accident, radioactive materials were deposited mostly on open surfaces such as lawns, parks, roads, and building roofs, for instance by contaminated rain. Since then, the surface contamination in urban areas has decreased because of the effects of wind, rain, traffic, street washing and cleanup.
Who Fukushima deaths?
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster casualties
Satellite image on 16 March 2011 of the four damaged reactor buildings | |
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Date | 11 March 2011 |
Deaths | 1 confirmed from radiation, 2,202 from evacuation. |
Non-fatal injuries | 6 with cancer or leukemia, 37 with physical injuries, 2 workers taken to hospital with radiation burns |
How many people died from Fukushima?
How many people were hurt? There were no deaths immediately during the nuclear disaster. At least 16 workers were injured in the explosions, while dozens more were exposed to radiation as they worked to cool the reactors and stabilise the plant. Three people were reportedly taken to hospital after high-level exposure.
What happened in Chernobyl and Fukushima?
The accident at Fukushima occurred after a series of tsunami waves struck the facility and disabled systems needed to cool the nuclear fuel. The accident at Chernobyl stemmed from a flawed reactor design and human error. At Fukushima, there were no explosions within the cores.