Savannah River National Laboratory
The Savannah River National Laboratory, also referred to as the Savannah River Site (SRS), is located near Aiken, South Carolina. In 1951, the laboratory was constructed and began operating to produce nuclear materials to support national defense efforts.
Today, the facility is called the Savannah River Technology Center. It is dedicated to research and development, environmental management and cleanup, and tritium processing.
Fact sheets
Nuclear workers from the Savannah River National Laboratory have been included in many NIOSH studies. Below are fact sheets that summarize some of the study findings for workers.
Multi-site leukemia worker notification (March 2008) presented at worker briefing September 2008.
Publications from NIOSH studies done at Savannah River
Assessment of plutonium exposures for an epidemiological study of US nuclear workers. (2005)
Evaluation of data for DOE site remediation workers. (2001) Final Report; 37 pgs
Leukemia mortality among radiation-exposed workers. (2001)
A case control study of multiple myeloma at four nuclear facilities (2000) PDF version of report: pages 1-50 (6566KB); pages 51-100 (3416KB); pages 101-150 (5744KB); pages 151-202 (4283KB).
Study of mortality among female nuclear weapons workers. (2000) Final Report; 447 pgs
Publications from grant-funded studies done at Savannah River
Leukemia mortality among workers at the Savannah River Site (2007)
Morality among workers at the Savannah River Site (2007)
The impact on relative risk estimates of inconsistencies between ICD-9 and ICD-10. (2006)
Use of multiple causes of death data in cancer mortality analyses. (2006)
Evaluation of external radiation dosimetry records at the Savannah River Site, 1951-1989. (2006)
Cragle D [1998]. Mortality among workers at the Savannah River nuclear fuels production facility. In: ASA 1998 proceedings of the section on statistics in epidemiology. Alexandria, VA: American Statistical Association, pp. 83-87.
Related websites
Savannah River Operations Office
Medical screening programs available to workers
Building Trades National Medical Screening Program
To learn more, call 1-800-866-9663