Full Description
The Manhattan Project was a large-scale, top-secret program of the U.S. federal government created with the specific purpose of developing the world's first nuclear weapon. Each step of the manufacturing process involved potential exposures to chemical and radiological hazards for those involved. Records documenting Manhattan Project processes, activities, and individual people were not uniform, archived in various locations, and at times destroyed due to both administrative and accidental reasons, resulting in a fragmented historical record of the people and activities.
Given these uncertainties, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs asked the National Academies to conduct a feasibility assessment to determine whether an epidemiologic study could be conducted to examine health outcomes in active-duty military veterans who participated in the Manhattan Project at 13 specified sites. The resulting report offers conclusions on the feasibility of conducting such a study and provides alternative methods to examine associations between exposures and adverse health outcomes among this population of veterans.
Table of Contents
Front Matter
Summary
1 Background, Policy Context, and Statement of Task
2 Committee's Approach to Its Statement of Task
3 Locations Specified in the Statement of Task and Other Manhattan Project Military Sites
4 Identifying the Veteran Population
5 Manhattan Project Exposures and Associated Records
6 Sources of Health Outcome Information
7 Feasibility Assessment: Overarching Themes and Conclusions
Appendix A: PL 117-168
Appendix B: Public Meeting Agendas for the Committee to Conduct a Feasibility Assessment of Veteran Health Effects of Manhattan Project (19421947)Related Waste
Appendix C: Committee Member and Staff Biographies
Appendix D: Selected Epidemiologic Studies of Radiological and Chemical Exposures
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