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- Agricultural communities; Health risks; Livestock health; Nevada -- Nevada Test Site; Nevada Test Site (NTS); Nuclear weapons -- Testing; Radiation carcinogenesis; Radiation exposure; Radioactive fallout; Radioactive pollution; Ranching communities; Rural conditions; Sheep -- Radioactive contamination; U.S. Atomic Energy Commission – Officials and employees; Utah (1)
- Nevada – Las Vegas (1)
- Public health (1)
- Urban health (1)
- Urban policy (1)
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Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Health Policy
Session 1 - Rationalizing The Home Front: The Cold War, The Nevada Test Site, And Radiation Exposure, Leisl A. Carr
Session 1 - Rationalizing The Home Front: The Cold War, The Nevada Test Site, And Radiation Exposure, Leisl A. Carr
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Beginning in 1953, radiation exposure and its effects became a hotly contested issue between the government, members of communities surrounding the Nevada Test Site (NTS), and researchers within the national scientific community. The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), concerned about maintaining a continental testing facility and aware that atomic testing would impact communities surrounding the NTS, sent representatives to areas potentially affected by fallout to instruct and reassure the affected public. How government officials perceived neighboring communities and how these communities perceived these representatives of the government often determined public responses to the atomic testing program. The story of radiation monitors …
Las Vegas: A Sustainable Urban Environment For Health?, Nancy Menzel
Las Vegas: A Sustainable Urban Environment For Health?, Nancy Menzel
Nevada Journal of Public Health
The rapid growth of Las Vegas has resulted in negative consequences for the health of its residents to a level that threatens the area’s sustainability. This article reviews key indicators of population health in Las Vegas through the framework of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Healthy People in Healthy Places and concludes that public health professionals, citizens, businesses, and political leaders must act now to protect and improve population health.