Anyway, since Gaianne is not gracing us with a reference, I decided to go fishing for one.
New Scientist: Science: Leukaemia and nuclear power stations ( 17 June 1989)
Subsequent investigations confirmed an excess of leukaemia and other cancer among children living near Sellafield, the complex British Nuclear Fuel runs in northwest England. ... Depending on which statistics are quoted, the excess represents up to a tenfold increase in the number of cases expected on the basis of conventional dose/risk models.
Depending on which statistics are quoted, the excess represents up to a tenfold increase in the number of cases expected on the basis of conventional dose/risk models.
Anyway, for anyone interested there is the COMARE 10th Report: The incidence of childhood cancer around nuclear installations in Great Britain (10 June 2005). Nothing is 'mere'. — Richard P. Feynman
(On a side note: I cannot confuse "cancer rate" with anything, because that term is basically undefined and left to interpretation by individuals. It is only used by anti-nuke-kooks when applying statistical trickery.)
You'll note that a "ten-fold increase in the incidence of leukaemia in children" is quite something different than "ten-fold increase of cancer rates"
"standard dose/risk models underestimate the expected number of additional child leukemia cases by a factor of up to 10". A far cry from "cancer rates increased by a factor of 10".