Committee on Medical Aspects of Radiation in the Environment

The Committee on Medical Aspects of Radiation in the Environment (COMARE) is a UK-wide advisory committee set up by the British government. It was established in 1985.[1]

Terms of reference and function

The terms of reference of COMARE are:

"to assess and advise Government and the devolved authorities on the health effects of natural and man-made radiation and to assess the adequacy of the available data and the need for further research".

COMARE is an independent expert advisory committee with members chosen for their medical and scientific expertise and recruited from universities, research and medical institutes. Members have never been drawn from the nuclear or electrical power supply industries.[2]

The committee offers independent advice to all government departments and devolved authorities, not just the health departments, and is responsible for assessing and advising them on the health effects of natural and man-made radiation. It is also asked to assess the adequacy of the available data and advise on the need for further research.[3]

COMARE had produced fourteen reports on a wide range of radiation issues by 2011.

The COMARE secretariat is provided by Public Health England which has incorporated the former Health Protection Agency's Radiation Protection Division, formerly the National Radiological Protection Board.

CERRIE

The Department of Health and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs asked COMARE to review the risks from internal radiation emitters and advise on any further research required. To help them to do this they set up the Committee Examining Radiation Risks from Internal Emitters (CERRIE) which operated between October 2001 and October 2004.[1]

The following persons were on the panel[4]

Chairman

Professor Dudley Goodhead, MRC Radiation and Genome Stability Unit

Members

Mr Richard Bramhall, The Low Level Radiation Campaign

Dr Chris Busby, Green Audit

Dr Roger Cox, National Radiological Protection Board

Dr Philip Day, University of Manchester

Professor Sarah Darby, ICRF Cancer Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford

Dr John Harrison, National Radiological Protection Board

Dr Colin Muirhead, National Radiological Protection Board

Mr Pete Roche, Greenpeace UK

Professor Jack Simmons, University of Westminster

Dr Richard Wakefield, British Nuclear Fuels Ltd

Professor Eric Wright, Ninewells Medical School, Dundee.

gollark: Twigs are thin things, therefore trivial bee apioform.
gollark: Unfortunately, due to compute limitations, my visual recognition models aren't great.
gollark: Oh. That kind of makes sense.
gollark: Although solar power and automatic time sync is cool.
gollark: Yes, that does look bad.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.