Man’s leukemia deemed result of his work at Fukushima plant

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Man’s leukemia deemed result of his work at Fukushima plant
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The labor ministry said a man who developed leukemia by helping in clean-up efforts at the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant is entitled to work-related compensation. It marks the second such case since the 2011 nuclear disaster. The Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare recognized that the cancer was due to exposure to radiation at the facility and said the government will cover his medical expenses. The ministry said Aug. 19 that the man, who is in his 50s, was involved in removing debris and repairing machinery that handled radioactive water at the plant between April 2011, a month after the triple meltdown triggered by the earthquake and tsunami disaster, and January 2015. His accumulative radiation exposure was 54.4 millisieverts. The man worked for a contractor with Tokyo Electric Power Co., the operator of the nuclear complex. He was diagnosed with leukemia in January 2015, and filed application for worker’s accident compensation at the Fukushima Labor Standards Inspection Office, a regional branch of the ministry. Under the ministry’s guidelines, eligibility for work-related compensation in such cases is granted if leukemia is diagnosed after the person worked for more than a year in an assignment which resulted in an annual dose of more than 5 millisieverts. The ministry’s decision to grant compensation in this case came after a panel of experts offered their opinions on the matter. The ministry is scrutinizing the cases of five other former workers at the plant who have applied for compensation. Compensation in such cases was first granted last October after a man in his early 40s was diagnosed with leukemia in January 2014. He was exposed to 16 millisieverts of radiation while he worked at the plant between 2012 and 2013. Applications for the work-related compensation as a result of the Fukushima disaster are expected to increase in coming years, experts say. According to TEPCO, those who had annual does of more than 5 millisieverts of radiation during fiscal 2015 numbered 4,952.

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