What are
the Health Risks of Radon?
EPA
estimates that about 20,000 lung cancer deaths each year in the U.S.
are radon-related. Exposure to radon is the second leading
cause of lung cancer after smoking. Radon is an odorless,
tasteless and invisible gas produced by the decay of naturally
occurring uranium in soil and water. Radon is a form of
ionizing radiation and a proven carcinogen. Lung cancer is the
only known effect on human health from exposure to radon in air.
Thus far, there is no evidence that children are at greater risk of
lung cancer than are adults.
Radon in air is ubiquitous. Radon is found in outdoor air and in
the indoor air of buildings of all kinds. EPA recommends homes
be fixed if the radon level is 4 pCi/L (pico Curies per Liter) or
more. Because there is no known safe level of exposure to radon, EPA
also recommends that Americans consider fixing their home for radon
levels between 2 pCi/L and 4 pCi/L. The average radon concentration
in the indoor air of America’s homes is about 1.3 pCi/L. It is upon
this level that EPA based its estimate of 20,000 radon-related lung
cancers a year upon. It is for this simple reason that EPA
recommends that Americans consider fixing their homes when the radon
level is between 2 pCi/L and 4 pCi/L. The average concentration of
radon in outdoor air is .4 pCi/L or 1/10th of EPA’s 4
pCi/L action level.
For smokers the risk of lung cancer is significant due to the
synergistic effects of radon and smoking. For this population about
62 people in a 1,000 will die of lung-cancer, compared to 7.3 people
in a 1,000 for never smokers. Put another way, a person who never
smoked (never smoker) who is exposed to 1.3 pCi/L has a 2 in 1,000
chance of lung cancer; while a smoker has a 20 in 1,000 chance of
dying from lung cancer. Figure A compares the risks between smokers
and never smokers; smokers are at a much higher risk than never
smokers, e.g., at 8 pCi/L the risk to smokers is six times the risk
to never smokers.
The radon health risk is underscored by the fact that in 1988
Congress added Title III on Indoor Radon Abatement to the Toxic
Substances Control Act. It codified and funded EPA’s then fledgling
radon program. Also that year, the Office of the U.S. Surgeon
General issued a warning about radon urging Americans to test their
homes and to reduce the radon level when necessary (U.S. Surgeon
General).
Unfortunately, many Americans presume that because the action
level is 4 pCi/L, a radon level of less than 4 pCi/L is ‘safe’. This
perception is altogether too common in the residential real estate
market. In managing any risk, we should be concerned with the
greatest risk. For most Americans, their greatest exposure to radon
is in their homes; especially in rooms that are below grade (e.g.,
basements), rooms that are in contact with the ground and those
rooms immediately above them.
It's never too late to reduce your risk of lung cancer.
Don't wait to test and fix a radon problem. If you
are a smoker, stop smoking. Consider quitting. Until
you can quit, smoke outside and provide your family with a
smoke-free home (www.epa.gov/smokefree).
Take the Smoke-free Home
Pledge today!
Radon Risk If You Smoke
| Radon Level |
If 1,000 people who
smoked
were exposed to this level over a lifetime*... |
The risk of cancer
from radon
exposure compares to**... |
WHAT TO DO:
Stop smoking and... |
| 20 pCi/L |
About 260 people could get lung cancer |
250 times the risk of drowning |
Fix your home |
| 10 pCi/L |
About 150 people could get lung cancer |
200 times the risk of dying in a home
fire |
Fix your home |
| 8 pCi/L |
About 120 people could get lung cancer |
30 times the risk of dying in a fall |
Fix your home |
| 4 pCi/L |
About 62 people could get lung cancer |
5 times the risk of dying in a car
crash |
Fix your home |
| 2 pCi/L |
About 32 people could get lung cancer |
6 times the risk of dying from poison |
Consider fixing between 2 and 4 pCi/L |
| 1.3 pCi/L |
About 20 people could get lung cancer |
(Average indoor radon level) |
(Reducing radon
levels below 2 pCi/L is difficult.) |
| 0.4 pCi/L |
About 3 people could get lung cancer |
(Average outdoor radon level) |
Note: If you are a former smoker, your risk
may be lower.
pCi/L (pico Curies per Liter)
* Lifetime risk of lung cancer deaths from EPA Assessment of
Risks from Radon in Homes (EPA 402-R-03-003).
** Comparison data calculated using the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's 1999-2001 National Center for
Injury Prevention and Control Reports. |
Radon Risk If You've Never Smoked
| Radon Level |
If 1,000 people who
never
smoked were exposed to this level over a lifetime*... |
The risk of cancer
from radon
exposure compares to**... |
WHAT TO DO: |
| 20 pCi/L |
About 36 people could get lung cancer |
35 times the risk of drowning |
Fix your home |
| 10 pCi/L |
About 18 people could get lung cancer |
20 times the risk of dying in a home
fire |
Fix your home |
| 8 pCi/L |
About 15 people could get lung cancer |
4 times the risk of dying in a fall |
Fix your home |
| 4 pCi/L |
About 7 people could get lung cancer |
The risk of dying in a car crash |
Fix your home |
| 2 pCi/L |
About 4 people could get lung cancer |
The risk of dying from poison |
Consider fixing between 2 and 4 pCi/L |
| 1.3 pCi/L |
About 2 people could get lung cancer |
(Average indoor radon level) |
(Reducing radon levels below
2 pCi/L is difficult.) |
| 0.4 pCi/L |
|
(Average outdoor radon level) |
Note: If you are a former smoker, your risk
may be higher.
pCi/L (pico Curies per Liter)
* Lifetime risk of lung cancer deaths from EPA Assessment of
Risks from Radon in Homes (EPA 402-R-03-003).
** Comparison data calculated using the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's 1999-2001 National Center for
Injury Prevention and Control Reports. |
Exposure to Radon Causes Lung Cancer In Non-smokers and
Smokers Alike
Lung cancer kills thousands of Americans every year. The
untimely deaths of Peter Jennings and Dana Reeve have raised public
awareness about lung cancer, especially among people who have never
smoked. Smoking, radon, and secondhand smoke are the leading causes
of lung cancer. Although lung cancer can be treated, the
survival rate is one of the lowest for those with cancer. From
the time of diagnosis, between 11 and 15 percent of those afflicted
will live beyond five years, depending upon demographic factors.
In many cases lung cancer can be prevented; this is especially true
for radon.
Smoking is the leading cause of lung cancer.
Smoking causes an estimated 160,000* cancer deaths in the U.S. every
year (American Cancer Society, 2004). And the rate among women
is rising. On January 11, 1964, Dr. Luther L. Terry, then U.S.
Surgeon General, issued the first warning on the link between
smoking and lung cancer. Lung cancer now surpasses breast
cancer as the number one cause of death among women. A smoker
who is also exposed to radon has a much higher risk of lung cancer.
Radon is the number one cause of lung cancer among
non-smokers, according to EPA estimates. Overall, radon is the
second leading cause of lung cancer. Radon is responsible for
about 21,000 lung cancer deaths every year. About 2,900 of
these deaths occur among people who have never smoked. On
January 13, 2005, Dr. Richard H. Carmona, the U.S. Surgeon General,
issued a national health advisory on radon. Visit
www.cheec.uiowa.edu/misc/radon.html
for more on a study by Dr. William Field on radon-related lung
cancer in women.
Secondhand smoke is the third leading cause of lung
cancer and responsible for an estimated 3,000 lung cancer deaths
every year. Smoking affects non-smokers by exposing them to
secondhand smoke. Exposure to secondhand smoke can have
serious consequences for children’s health, including asthma
attacks, affecting the respiratory tract (bronchitis, pneumonia),
and may cause ear infections.
Learning more about lung cancer. The
following sources provide a wide range of good information about
lung cancer, prevention, and treatment.
Studies Find Direct Evidence Linking Radon in Homes to Lung
Cancer - Two studies show definitive evidence of an association
between residential radon exposure and lung cancer. Two
studies, a North American study and a European study, both combined
data from several previous residential studies. These two
studies go a step beyond earlier findings. They confirm the
radon health risks predicted by occupational studies of underground
miner’s who breathed radon for a period of years. Early in the
debate about radon-related risks, some researchers questioned
whether occupational studies could be used to calculate risks from
exposure to radon in the home environment. “These findings
effectively end any doubts about the risks to Americans of having
radon in their homes,” said Tom Kelly, Director of EPA’s Indoor
Environments Division. “We know that radon is a carcinogen.
This research confirms that breathing low levels of radon can lead
to lung cancer.”