“…The role of iodine deficiency (Shakhtarin et al, 2003), intense screening for thyroid cancer (Moysich et al, 2002) and short-lived radioisotopes other than 131 I complicate the derivation of risk estimates from the Chernobyl data (UNSCEAR, 2000), but the ERR coefficient for childhood thyroid cancer that may be derived from the children exposed to radioiodine in the former USSR is compatible with that obtained from external irradiation (Jacob et al, 2000). Little evidence has been found for an increased risk of childhood leukaemia associated with Chernobyl contamination (Parkin et al, 1996). There is, however, some suggestive evidence of a raised incidence of infant (o1 year of age) leukaemia after the Chernobyl accident in Greece (Petridou et al, 1996), West Germany (Steiner et al, 1998), Belarus (Ivanov et al, 1998) and Scotland (Gibson et al, 1988) that might be related to exposure to fallout, although the findings of these geographical correlation studies should be viewed with caution until the results of individual-based studies are available.…”