BOULDER, Mont. 鈥 Twice a year, Brian Tichenor makes the 1,200-mile drive each way from his home in Kansas to a defunct uranium mine in Montana, where he takes an elevator 85 feet below the surface to sit amid radioactive radon gas to ease the pain from his chronic eye condition.
鈥淚 found it like I think a lot of people do,鈥 said Tichenor, 67. 鈥淚t’s a point of desperation with conventional treatment.鈥
While radon is commonly known as a hazardous gas removed from basements, people in pain travel to Montana and pay to breathe, drink and bathe in its radioactive particles. The travelers view the radon exposure as low-dose radiation therapy for a long list of health issues. But the Environmental Protection Agency and the World Health Organization, among others, blame the gas as the . Although cancer doctors use radiation as a front-line treatment to destroy dangerous cells, its role in the U.S. in low doses for other ailments is disputed. The pandemic has recharged that debate as across the world test whether low doses of radiation can help treat covid-19 patients.
But radon gas isn鈥檛 the same , radiation experts caution. Radon is just one of the radioactive chemical elements and, because it鈥檚 a gas, it can be inhaled, making it particularly dangerous. Sitting in a radon-filled room and targeted radiation treatment in a medical facility are as different as 鈥渃halk and cheese,鈥 said , a professor of radiation oncology at the University of Rochester.
鈥淚n clinical therapy, we know exactly what the dose is, we know exactly where it’s going,鈥 he said.
Marples said much of the argument for radon鈥檚 therapeutic use relies on historical reports, unlike evidence-based research on clinical radiation. Still, some radiation experts are split on what level of radon should be deemed dangerous and whether it could have positive health effects.
Another concern: The radon treatment in the mines is largely unregulated. The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services doesn’t have the authority to permit or license the mines, though department spokesperson Jon Ebelt said the adverse health risk from exposure is well known. The EPA also doesn鈥檛 have the power to mandate limits on radon.
Nonetheless, each year travelers head to western Montana, where four inactive mines flush with radon are within 11 miles of one another near the rural communities of Basin and Boulder. Day passes range from $7 to $15. The gas naturally forms when radioactive elements in the mountains鈥 bedrock decay.
Outside the Merry Widow Health Mine, a billboard-like banner announces 鈥淔ountain of Youth. FEEL YOUNG AGAIN!鈥 Inside its tunnels, water seeps from the rock walls. Those who want full immersion can slip into a clawfoot tub filled with radon-tainted water. People soak their feet and hands in water or simply sit and work on a puzzle. On a bench sits a printout of a on clinical trials that show low-dose radiation could be a treatment for covid-19.
To owner Chang Kim, 69, his business is a mission, especially for those with chronic medical conditions such as arthritis or diabetes. Those who swear by radon therapy say that, in low doses, a little stress on the body triggers the immune system to readapt and reduces inflammation.
鈥淭he people coming to the mines, they鈥檙e not stupid,鈥 Kim said. 鈥淧eople鈥檚 lives are made better by them.鈥
He learned about the mines 14 years ago when he and his wife, Veronica Kim, lived in Seattle and a connective tissue disease crumpled Veronica鈥檚 hands and feet. Traditional medicine wasn鈥檛 working. After two sessions a year in the mines ever since, Veronica smiles when she shows her hands.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e not deformed anymore,鈥 she said, adding she鈥檚 been able to cut down on her use of meloxicam, a medication to reduce pain and swelling.
Tichenor said going to a mine with radon over six years has been one of the few things to calm his scleritis, a disorder that causes pain he describes as ice picks stabbing his eyes. As for its potential danger, he said radon treatment is just like any medication: Too much can cause harm.
He and other radon users point to European countries such as Germany, where the therapy may be controversial but treatments for various conditions that .

In the U.S., the EPA maintains that no level of radon exposure is risk-free even though everyone encounters the element in their lives. The agency notes radon is responsible for about 21,000 lung cancer deaths every year. It recommends that homeowners with radon levels of 4 picocuries per liter or more should . By contrast, the owners of Montana鈥檚 oldest radon therapy mine, Free Enterprise Radon Health Mine, said their mine averages around 1,700.
Monique Mandali said the federal guidelines are 鈥渁 bunch of baloney.鈥 Mandali lives in Helena, about 40 minutes from the mines, and tries to fit in three sessions at Free Enterprise a year 鈥 25 hours of exposure spread out over 10 days for arthritis in her back.
鈥淧eople say, 鈥榃ell, you know, but you could get lung cancer.鈥 And I respond, 鈥業’m 74. Who cares at this point?鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚’d rather take my chances with radon in terms of living with arthritis than with other Western medication.鈥
, formerly a U.S. Department of Energy scientist who studied , is among those who believe the federal government鈥檚 no-level-of-radon-exposure stance goes too far. He pointed to low doses of radiation potentially turn on pathways within bodies that could be protective. Though what鈥檚 considered a 鈥渓ow dose鈥 depends on who’s talking.
鈥淚f you want to go into a radon mine twice a year, I鈥檇 say, OK, that鈥檚 not too much,” he said. 鈥淚f you want to live down there, I’d say that鈥檚 too much.鈥
In the early 1900s, before antibiotics were popularized, were used to treat pneumonia with reports it relieved respiratory symptoms. Since then, fear has largely kept the therapeutic potential of low-dose radiation untapped, said Dr. , an associate professor with the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University. But amid the pandemic, health care providers struggling to find treatments as hospital patients lie dying have been giving clinical radiation another look.
So far, that patients who received targeted low-dose radiation to their lungs got off oxygen and out of the hospital sooner than those without the treatment. Khan said more research is necessary, but it could eventually expand clinical radiation鈥檚 role for other illnesses.
鈥淪ome people think all radiation is the same thing, that all radiation is like the Hiroshima, Nagasaki bombs, but that’s clearly not the case,鈥 Khan said. 鈥淚f you put radiation in the hands of the experts and the right people 鈥 we use it wisely, we use it carefully 鈥 that balances risk and benefits.鈥
The logo for Free Enterprise Radon Health Mine is a miner skipping with crutches in the air. Roughly 70 years ago, a woman said her bursitis disappeared after visiting the mine several times. Thousands of others followed suit.
鈥淲e believe in it,鈥 said Leah Lewis, who co-owns the mine with her husband, Ryan Lewis, and has relied on it to help treat her Crohn鈥檚 disease.
The couple live on-site and grew up in Boulder, going into the tunnels just as their 5-year-old daughter does now. Her husband鈥檚 great-grandfather owned the mine, and the business has been in the family ever since.
鈥淣ot one person has come back and said they鈥檝e gotten lung cancer here,鈥 Ryan Lewis said. 鈥淚f they did, they would shut us down so fast.鈥
Aside from a billboard outside Helena, the family doesn鈥檛 really advertise the business. Clients tend to find them. Like many companies, Ryan Lewis said, Free Enterprise took a hit last year as people canceled plans because of the pandemic. Before that, he said, the business broke about even, adding that radon can be 鈥渁 hard sell.鈥
But he said the family of cattle ranchers plans to keep it running as long as it doesn鈥檛 cost them money.
鈥淭he land is an investment, and we want to keep it in the family,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd there are a lot of people who use this, and there鈥檚 some responsibility there.鈥