Making Sure Your Home is Radon Safe:
By Peter C. Foller, Ph.D. 2019 December
A New Tool
A hazard, though little heard of
1 in 10 U. S. homes that is poorly understood. Radon. If you do not specifically test for it, you will never know it is there!
which is why it is hazardous.
of daughter elements over a lengthy pathway to eventual stability, produces fast moving negatively charged electrons (called beta particles) and fast moving positively charged
helium nuclei (called alpha particles). Both
are of high enough energy to break chemical bonds and cause genetic damage in living tissue. Being a gas, when radon is inhaled, its decay can cause damage within lung tissue. With long-term exposure, this can increase a person’s chances of getting lung cancer.
are diagnosed with lung cancer every year. Smoking, of course, is the leading cause. However, radon also takes its toll. The U. S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates radon is the cause of 21,000
deaths in the U. S. every year.
Some portion of this ongoing tragedy is preventable. Smoking is a choice. It is also a choice whether or not to investigate your home for hazardous levels of radon and then take well-known and effective mitigation steps, some of which are not even very costly.
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