Title | Description | Relation Is Part Of | Date | ||
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1 | HEALTH SPECIALIST TO TALK ON SUPERFUND LAW AT U OF U LECTURE | Barry L. Johnson, Ph.D., associate administrator of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), will present a one-hour seminar on the "Health Provisions of the Superfund Law," on Wednesday, December 9, at 12 noon in room 212 of the University of Utah College of Nursing. | Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News | 1987-12-07 | |
2 | RESEARCHERS CONFIRM LINK BETWEEN UTAH LEUKEMIAS, 19 50s NUCLEAR TESTS IN NEVADA | Fallout from above-ground nuclear testing in Nevada may have been responsible for approximately 3-6 percent of the deaths from leukemia in Utah during the 30 years from 1952-1981, according to a study to be published August 1 in the Journal of the American Medical Association. | Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News | 1990-07-27 | |
3 | RESEARCHERS CONFIRM LINK BETWEEN UTAH THYROID DISORDERS, 1950s NUCLEAR TESTS IN NEVADA | An association between exposure to radioactive isotopes of iodine generated by above-ground testing of nuclear weapons at the Nevada Test Site some 40 years ago and thyroid neoplasms, or growths, has been confirmed by investigators in a National Cancer Institute (NCI)-sponsored study. | Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News | 1992-08-04 | |
4 | STUDY ENDS 20-YEAR CONTROVERSY OVER AMOUNT OF RADIATION EXPOSURE IN HIROSHIMA | Previous estimates of the amount of neutron dose received by Hiroshima atomic-bomb survivors are essentiallyaccurate and the existing standards for estimating risk for radiation-induced cancer need not be changed, according to a study published in the July 31 issue of Nature. | Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News | 2003-07-28 | |
5 | RESEARCHER FROM U PHARMACY COLLEGE WINS AWARD FOR STUDY CLEARING THE AIR ABOUT DUST HAZARD FROM MILITARY VEHICLES | SALT LAKE CITY - A University of Utah College of Pharmacy researcher has won a federal award for his team's work determining that the effect of small-particle dust created by military vehicles does not degrade air quality for the long term or far from the source. | Press Releases; University of Utah Health Sciences Center News | 2004-12-20 |