The statistics provided below are based on information obtained from a questionnaire that is completed by individual researchers. Due to the nature of the information requested, some subjective interpretations of the questions should be expected.
* 994,537 of the total human subjects (65% of subjects in the database) are from studies conducted at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), mostly in epidemiological studies. This figure has not been included in the chart.
There are 46 research facilities reporting data included in the current database. Thirteen of these research facilities are DOE laboratories, 33 are non-DOE laboratories (such as hospitals and universities) receiving DOE funding or other sites doing studies related to DOE activities. Detailed information can be obtained about most of these research facilities through the above links to their home pages on the World Wide Web.
The DOE-funded or DOE-operated research facilities reported a total of 240 active projects (projects that received funds and/or used human subjects during FY2002) and 54 inactive projects during FY2002, for a total of 294 projects. Of these 68% were conducted at DOE facilities and 32% at non-DOE facilities. Three national laboratories, BNL, LLNL, and LBNL comprised 42% of the active projects while LLNL had the largest number with 45 active projects. Ninety-eight of the 294 projects are not currently supported by DOE funds. The reason these projects were listed in the DOE's Human Subjects Research Database was because the research was performed in DOE laboratories or by DOE employees or concerned DOE activities. Projects with current IRB approval have been listed in the database even if they received no funds or reported no current human subject activity. These inactive projects were either formerly active or are new initiatives.
The funding from DOE that was directly associated with tasks or portions of projects involving the use of human subjects was about 49 million dollars during FY2002; funding from other federal and private sources at DOE facilities for human subjects projects was about 13 million. The total funding for human subjects activities was about 62 million. One project, managed by the National Academy of Sciences with the Radiation Effects Research Foundation (RERF) in Hiroshima, Japan, accounted for 23% of the DOE reported funding. Of the NAS funds, ~95% go directly to the RERF.
About 99% (1,518,454) of the total human subjects in the database are records from registries, questionnaires, surveys and epidemiological studies. Because these studies were included in the database the total number of human subjects reported is not representative of actual people participating but includes a large number of records from human subjects.
A total of 1,534,123 human subjects were reported during FY2002 in DOE-funded, DOE-site, or DOE-related projects. About 19% are reported by DOE facilities and 81% are reported by non-DOE facilities. This year one NIOSH epidemiological study included 600,000 subjects, 39% of the total number of subjects in the database. ORAU (6.4% of reported human subjects) serves as the Epidemiologic Surveillance Data Center for the DOE and most of the subjects from this facility are from records-based studies and registries. The NAS project is also primarily an epidemiological study with some clinical followup. Other epidemiological studies also contribute to the total number of human subjects, making it appear large.
DOE does NOT support any research in which the effect of radiation upon humans per se is the object of study. Of the 294 projects listed in this database approximately 48 involved human exposure to radiation. The number of subjects involved in these studies was 8479. In all of the studies the radiation used was as a tracer to facilitate imaging (i.e. PET), or for diagnostic (i.e. X-Ray) and/or therapeutic reasons.