Today the U.S. Embassy sent this note alerting citizens not to give water to
infants in Tokyo. But I guess it's Ok to bathe your baby in it? What about
your dog? It's true Ranger prefers Arrowhead to tap water any day.
My favorite part of the memo below is in the Q & A portion where they try
to describe the difference between Japanese and U.S. radiation guidelines.
My take is, so if "one" were trying not to piss off the Japanese government
than "one" might use the description they used.
Yesterday the Embassy sent out a note which looked suspiciously like a
retraction (or at least some serious back pedaling) from the memo the day
before on distribution of potassium iodide pills. Just part of the ongoing
series of he said; she said. You guess whose right. It's only your life.
U.S. Ambassador to Japan Statement
Warning For Parents and Caretakers About Radioactive Iodine Detected in Tokyo
Drinking Water Supply
March 24, 2011
The Tokyo metropolitan government on Wednesday, March 23, 2011, cautioned
residents that infants should drink only bottled water because radioactive iodine
exceeding the limit for that age group was detected in water at a purification plant.
The U.S. Embassy in Japan suggests U.S. citizens who live in Tokyo follow these
recommendations. In addition, women who are pregnant or nursing should also follow
these recommendations and drink bottled water. This guidance is consistent with the
guidance that the United States Government would provide to Americans in the
United States under similar circumstances.
U.S. citizens in metropolitan Tokyo can take the following steps to safeguard the
health of infants (aged 0-3 years):
• If giving water to infants, use only bottled water.
• Use only bottled water to mix formula, cereal or other infant foods.
Health experts say that changing the water source for infants from tap water to
bottled water should be adequate protection from exposure to radioactive iodine.
No additional medication, such as potassium iodide (KI), is necessary at this time.
Taking KI when it is not needed can harm a person’s health.
At this time, no changes in drinking water are recommended for adults because the
limit for adults is higher than the amount detected in the water purification plant.
Q and A:
--What are we advising U.S. citizens? Why?
Due to an elevated level of Iodine-131 found at a local Tokyo water purification
plant,we are advising American citizens in Tokyo that infants (aged 0-3), as well
as women who are pregnant or nursing, should drink only bottled water.
--What is the Japanese standard being used?
The Japanese standard for Iodine-131 in drinking water is 100 becquerels per liter
if the water is to be consumed by an infant (0-12 months) and 300 becquerels per
liter if the water is to be consumed by an adult. The current reported
contamination of 210 becquerels per liter is therefore about twice the permitted
level for infants and about two thirds of the permitted level for adults, under
Japanese regulations.
--What is the U.S. standard?
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s published standard for Iodine-131
contamination in drinking water is 3 picocuries per liter, which is equal to
about 0.1 becquerels per liter. However, the assumptions underlying the EPA
standard for continuous exposure do not apply to the current situation in Japan,
which is a temporary exposure resulting from an accidental release. In addition,
the science of radiation protection has advanced considerably since the EPA
standard was published in 1974. If one uses the latest science and makes the
adjustments in the calculations underlying the EPA standard in order to make
it applicable to the temporary exposure occurring in Japan, one obtains a
figure practically identical to the standard that the Japanese authorities are
applying.
What is the risk of the current Iodine-131 levels to adults drinking the water?
--Short-term exposures at the levels that have been reported do not present
significantly increased risks beyond the sensitive populations already identified.
I had no idea I would ever know so much about radiation. A good friend of
mine, who moonlights as a yoga instructor, sent the following information to
me right before I left Tokyo. Ironically therapeutic baths had also been
recommended to us the day prior by a room mate of a friend of ours who is
Eastern European and happens to be a stripper in one of Tokyo's high end
gentlemen's clubs (but that's another story).
Anti-Radiation
Drink, and Therapeutic Baths
Yogi Bhajan taught a Meditation for Atomic Radiation
on May 17, 1978.
He also gave an Anti-Radiation Juice recipe to Tarn Taran Kaur
during the time of the
Chernobyl nuclear disaster. We’ve also included Therapeutic
Bath instructions for
decreasing radiaton levels. This is all useful information for those
of us who live in areas
high in ‘natural’ radiation as well as those in Japan in the
disaster area.
Anti-Radiation Juice
Drink 3 glasses daily:
1 part pineapple juice, 1 part tomato juice, 1 part apple juice
The best foods to eat after radiation exposure are:
Seaweed and Miso in various forms.
Also beets, carrots, onions, and garlic. Since
the radiation may be on the fresh plants,
use sprout seeds and beans to replace fresh
greens.
___________________________________________
Therapeutic baths can also be helpful for decreasing radiation levels and eliminating
toxins.
Therapeutic Baths for Elimination of Radiation, Chemicals, and Metals
By Dr. Linda Lancaster
Therapeutic baths are utilized to cleanse and neutralize many types of pollutants.
- Baths should be taken in water as hot as you can handle without feeling faint.
- During the period of soaking, the toxins are drawn to the surface of the skin.
- As the water cools to slightly below body temperature, osmotic exchange of
- fluids takes place and the toxins are drawn out of the body and into the tub of
- water.
- If you have high blood pressure or heart weakness, do not make the bath too hot,
- and check with your doctor beforehand.
Sea Salt and Baking Soda Bath: For most types of Radiation
Pour one pound of pure salt and one pound of baking soda into the tub of hot water.
Use sea salt or kosher salt—check the label to make sure there are not any additives.
Soak in the tub for 20-30 minutes or until the water cools.
Baking Soda Bath: For Man-Made Radiations such as Barium Tests
and Ingested Radioactive Isotopes
Pour two pounds of baking soda into a full tub of hot water. Soak in the tub
for 20-30
minutes until the water cools.
Clorox Bath: For Elimination of Chemicals and Metals
Pour 1/2 cup of Clorox into the full tub of hot water. Soak in the tub for 20-30 minutes
or until the water cools. Use only Clorox brand bleach.
Do not use Fresh Scent or
powdered bleach or any other brand.
Apple Cidar Vinegar Bath: For Elimination of Uric Acid Deposits
and some Chemicals
Pour one quart of apple cider vinegar into a tub of hot water. Soak in the tub
for
30 minutes. Sweating sometimes occurs.
I'd be sweating too if I had to drink any of these concoctions but a bath always
sounds good. Do they make a rosemary scented Clorox bleach?