Evaluation of radionuclide concentrations and average annual committed effective dose due to medicinal plants and soils commonly consumed by pregnant women in Osukuru, Tororo (Uganda).

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dc.contributor.author Biira, Saphina
dc.contributor.author Ochom, Peter
dc.contributor.author Oryema, Bosco
dc.date.accessioned 2021-05-04T07:32:11Z
dc.date.available 2021-05-04T07:32:11Z
dc.date.issued 2020-11-10
dc.identifier.citation Biira, Saphina, Ochom, Peter & Oryema, Bosco. (2020). Evaluation of radionuclide concentrations and average annual committed effective dose due to medicinal plants and soils commonly consumed by pregnant women in Osukuru, Tororo (Uganda). Journal of Environmental Radioactivity Volume 227, February 2021, 106460 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12283/711
dc.description Article en_US
dc.description.abstract The intention of the study was to establish the activity concentrations and the annual committed effective dose due to ingestion of medicinal plants and soils by pregnant women and their probable effects to infants. The samples of medicinal plants and soils were collected from Osukuru, Tororo District (Uganda). The naturally occurring radionuclides investigated were 226Ra, 232Th and 40K and their activity concentrations were determined using NaI gamma detector. In the medicinal plants, the average activity concentrations of 226Ra, 232Th and 40K were found to be 6.04 Bq/kg, 9.65 Bq/kg and 359.59 Bq/kg respectively. African Basil registered the highest activity concentration of 226Ra of 10.02 Bq/kg, spider plant had the highest activity concentration of 232Th of 18.60 Bq/kg whereas the pumpkin registered the highest activity concentrations of 40K of 437.92 Bq/kg. The average activity concentrations of 226Ra, 232Th and 40K in ‘medicinal soils’ were 68.87 Bq/kg, 78.20 Bq/kg and 477.44 Bq/kg respectively. The soils from the anthills registered the highest activity concentration of 226Ra and 40K while the one from bricks registered the highest activity concentration of 232Th. The annual committed effective dose due to the ingestion of medicinal plants varied from 0.096 to 0.297 mSv/y with an average of 0.194 mSv/y in infants, 0.016–0.040 mSv/y with an average of 0.029 mSv/y for individuals of age range 12–17 years and 0.007–0.018 mSv/y with an average of 0.013 mSv/y for individuals older than 17 years. Whereas the annual committed effective dose due to the ingestion of ‘medicinal soils’ varied from 1.28 to 1.65 mSv/y with an average of 1.46 mSv/y in infants, 0.23–0.30 mSv/y with an average of 0.26 mSv/y (12–17 years) and 0.07–0.09 mSv/y with an average of 0.08 mSv/y for individuals older than 17 years. In medicinal plants, the annual committed effective dose for the all age groups examined were below 0.3 mSv/y (maximum world permissible as reported UNSCEAR, 2000) while that due to the ingestion of ‘medicinal soils’ had values higher 0.3 mSv/y in infants. The results of this study show that there is inherent danger to the infants in consuming soils during pregnancy and this should be discouraged. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Muni University, Busitema University en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Busitema University ; Elsevier Ltd. en_US
dc.subject Medicinal plants en_US
dc.subject Geophagy en_US
dc.subject Pregnant women en_US
dc.subject Natural radioactivity en_US
dc.subject Gamma-ray spectrometry en_US
dc.subject Annual committed effective dose en_US
dc.title Evaluation of radionuclide concentrations and average annual committed effective dose due to medicinal plants and soils commonly consumed by pregnant women in Osukuru, Tororo (Uganda). en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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