A-bombing leukemia effects on second-generation
HIROSHIMA, Japan - Nanao Kamada, an expert on blood diseases and Hiroshima University professor emeritus, speaks at a scholarly meeting in the city of Nagasaki on June 3, 2012. At the meeting, a study led by Kamada was presented, showing that more people born within 10 years of the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima developed leukemia by the time they reached the age of 35 if both their parents had been exposed to the blast, compared with those with only one parent surviving the bombing.
- Product Code
- ILEA001170077
- Registered date
- 2012/6/03 00:00:00
- Credit
- Kyodo / Kyodo News Images
- Media source
- 2012 Kyodo News
- Media size
- 604 × 395 pixel
- Deployment size
- 50.25(KB)*
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