Author:
Stanley Fintan K. T.,Irvine Jesse L.,Jacques Weston R.,Salgia Shilpa R.,Innes Daniel G.,Winquist Brandy D.,Torr David,Brenner Darren R.,Goodarzi Aaron A.
Abstract
AbstractHuman-made buildings can artificially concentrate radioactive radon gas of geologic origin, exposing occupants to harmful alpha particle radiation emissions that damage DNA and increase lung cancer risk. We examined how North American residential radon exposure varies by modern environmental design, occupant behaviour and season. 11,727 residential buildings were radon-tested using multiple approaches coupled to geologic, geographic, architectural, seasonal and behavioural data with quality controls. Regional residences contained 108 Bq/m3 geometric mean radon (min < 15 Bq/m3; max 7,199 Bq/m3), with 17.8% ≥ 200 Bq/m3. Pairwise analysis reveals that short term radon tests, despite wide usage, display limited value for establishing dosimetry, with precision being strongly influenced by time of year. Regression analyses indicates that the modern North American Prairie residential environment displays exceptionally high and worsening radon exposure, with more recent construction year, greater square footage, fewer storeys, greater ceiling height, and reduced window opening behaviour all associated with increased radon. Remarkably, multiple test approaches reveal minimal winter-to-summer radon variation in almost half of properties, with the remainder having either higher winter or higher summer radon. This challenges the utility of seasonal correction values for establishing dosimetry in risk estimations, and suggests that radon-attributable cancers are being underestimated.
Funder
Roy Romanow Provincial Laboratory Saskatchewan Health Authority
Canada Research Chairs
Gouvernement du Canada | Health Canada
Gouvernement du Canada | Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Alberta Real Estate Foundation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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