... continued from page 3 The Color Is Not Pink
Six years later, we found that Joe had lung cancer, which had spread to his liver and bones. When we asked the oncologist what could have caused this lung cancer he said, “Smoking and radon gas.” There was no surgery to fix the lung cancer that had metastasized. Joe died within six weeks of diagnosis. After his death, I found out that we had been living with high levels of radon gas for over 18 years and didn’t know it. We didn’t know
that radon gas was the leading cause of lung cancer in nonsmokers. The combination of tobacco smoke and radon multiplies the danger of one's lung cancer risk – a sort of “double whammy.” We didn’t know that it is very easy to test a house for radon and if the level is high, it is not difficult to fix. Please go to http://www.epa.gov/iaq/whereyoulive.html and click on your state because many states offer free radon test kits!
Radon is a radioactive gas released from the normal decay of uranium in rocks and soil. It is an invisible, odorless, tasteless gas that seeps up through the ground and can seep into our homes and buildings through openings around pipes and sump pumps and through the concrete, so there’s no way to know if you are living with this silent killer unless you test for it. It can be in any type of home: frame, brick, old, new, with a basement or without a basement. The surgeon general urges everyone to test for radon in his or her home because each home is different and must be tested individually. Just because your neighbor had a very low radon level does not mean that your home will also test low. The EPA’s action level is 4.0 picocuries per liter of air (pCi/L), but consideration should be given to lowering that to 2.0 pCi/L.
The Office of Inspector General sent a release on November 8, 2008 to Congress, which included the following paragraph:
Of 6.7 million new single -family detached homes built nationwide between 2001 and 2005, only about 469,000 incorporated radon-resistant features. Of 76.1 million existing single family homes in the United States in 2005, only about 2.1 million had radon-reducing features in place.
Please let me repeat: “Prevention is the way to win the war on lung cancer.” I urge you to quit smoking and to test your home for radon gas. If you are building a new home, please incorporate radon control features in the construction. If not for yourself, do it for those who love you and for those you love. Only 12% to 15% of those diagnosed with lung cancer live five years. There are not large masses of demonstrators against lung cancer, because many of them are not here to share their stories with us.
Gloria Linnertz
618 Evansville Ave.
Waterloo, IL 62298
Citizens for Radioactive Radon Reduction
Revised and submitted 1/26/2018
Prevention is the way to win the war on lung cancer.
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RADON