draggonlaady: (Default)
is so rage-building some times. Oleander is NOT food. Fuckwits who sell it as a nutritional supplement/diet aid need to be beaten, then prosecuted.

Japanese nuclear plant-partial melt down? Comments, [livejournal.com profile] funranium? Heh. They made it almost to the bottom of the first page before mentioning Chernobyl...
draggonlaady: (Vampire Cat)
I may have mentioned this issue several years ago, but here it is again. There's a shocking disparity between regulations for animals and humans treated with radioactive substances.

From personal experience at the University Teaching Hospital, horses treated with Technetium for bone scans are kept in isolated stalls with special disposal of all bedding for 3 - 5 days. Cats treated with Iodine 131 for thyroid disorders are kept in isolation upwards of a week. When I went in for a hyda-scan and was treated with Technetium, not only was I not isolate AT ALL, I was not even given any information on potential radiation dangers (minimal, I know, but still, it's the principle of the thing) before undergoing the procedure, and I was not warned AT ALL about potential radiation exposure to people/pets/babies, nor was I asked if I expected to come into contact with pets or babies. Not a single bloody word of it. So the parts in that article about humans not always following directions? fuck 'em. Humans aren't always GIVEN directions.

Though for amusement value, my co-worker followed me around for a while with a Geiger counter to establish "minimum safe distance".

Now, in reality, what this probably means is that regulations for animals are stricter than actually necessary, but still.

A question

Nov. 6th, 2010 10:22 am
draggonlaady: (Vampire Cat)
for [livejournal.com profile] funranium. I'm thinking that any danger posed to humans by a rabbit who drank contaminated water is minimal, but you'd know better--is this actually newsworthy, or just taking up space in the paper?

Radioactive rabbit trapped at Hanford

RICHLAND – A radioactive rabbit was trapped on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, but there is no sign any people were exposed to the animal.

Washington state Health Department workers with the Office of Radiation Protection have been searching for contaminated rabbit droppings. None has been found in areas accessible to the public, regional director Earl Fordham said Thursday.

Officials suspect the rabbit sipped some water left from the recent demolition of a Cold War-era building used in the production of nuclear weapons, the Tri-City Herald reported Friday.

Contaminated animals occasionally are found at the nuclear reservation, but more often they are in the center of Hanford, far from town.

The rabbit trapped at the 300 Area caught the Health Department’s attention because it was close enough to the site’s boundaries to potentially come in contact with people.

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