Some
new mothers in Japan may soon be adding radiation testing of their breast milk
to their list of health checkups.
Government officials say they are considering
widespread testing of breast milk samples of new mothers in Fukushima
Prefecture, home of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
The details have yet to be finalised,
according to a spokesman at the prefecture, who declined to give his name as is
customary in Japan. But the spokesman said the prefecture is working out a plan
to obtain samples of the breast milk from new mothers in the region.
Mothers in the prefecture have publicly held
protests, expressing outrage over possible health effects of radiation from the
plant affecting their newborns. About 18,000 babies are born each year in the
prefecture. About half of those babies, according to the government, are
breastfed.
A survey conducted in May and June by Japan's
national government found traces of radioactive cesium in the breast milk of
seven of 21 mothers in Fukushima. Experts say the minute amounts posed no
health risks to babies.
The new plan is one of the many safety
measures that have been considered after the massive earthquake and tsunami
that hit Japan on March 11, 2011. The disaster killed more than 15,000 people
in northeastern Japan and sent plumes of radioactive particles from the damaged
nuclear power plant.
CNN
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