US official: Research finds uranium in Navajo women, babies
Source: Associated Press
US official: Research finds uranium in Navajo women, babies
By MARY HUDETZ
October 7, 2019
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) About a quarter of Navajo women and some infants who were part of a federally funded study on uranium exposure had high levels of the radioactive metal in their systems, decades after mining for Cold War weaponry ended on their reservation, a U.S. health official Monday.
The early findings from the University of New Mexico study were shared during a congressional field hearing in Albuquerque. Dr. Loretta Christensen the chief medical officer on the Navajo Nation for Indian Health Service, a partner in the research said 781 women were screened during an initial phase of the study that ended last year.
Among them, 26% had concentrations of uranium that exceeded levels found in the highest 5% of the U.S. population, and newborns with equally high concentrations continued to be exposed to uranium during their first year, she said.
The research is continuing as authorities work to clear uranium mining sites across the Navajo Nation.
It forces us to own up to the known detriments associated with a nuclear-forward society, said U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland, who is an enrolled member of Laguna Pueblo, a tribe whose jurisdiction lies west of Albuquerque.
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