Title: Radiological Protection
1Radiological Protection
The Society for Radiological Protection
2A general discussion on the history, ethics and
basic science of radiological protection
3NOTE TO THE SPEAKER
- Before using this presentation, please refer to
the notes "Public Presentations - Standard
Format" at http//www.srp-uk.org - Afterwards, please email the Society that you
have used the presentation. We would like to know
how it went, and would particularly like to have
your modified version. - Issue 1 - April 2001
4CONTENT
- Introduction
- What is radiation?
- Demonstration
- Background radiation
- Effects of radiation
- Setting limits
- Benefits from the use of ionising radiation
- Living with risks
- Conclusion
5INTRODUCTION
- Me
- The Society for Radiological Protection
6Me
- Who am I?
- What's my job?
- Why I do what I do.
- Why I'm a radiological protection professional.
- How I keep up to date with the profession, share
experiences, learn from others.
7The Society forRadiological Protection
- Joining the club (learned society)
- What's in it for me
- access to independent forum on safety issues
- access to the best brains in the business
- access to international information
- peer recognition as competent professional
(certification scheme)
8How?
- Journal
- web site
- meetings
- conferences
9Why am I speaking to you?
- Many people worried by radiation - confused by
the contradictions (diagnostic x-rays
good/radioactive waste bad). - We believe that to help workers, patients and the
public deal safely and rationally with radiation,
they should understand something about it. - SRP can do this independent of both the nuclear
industry and anti-nuclear protest groups.
10WHAT IS RADIATION?
11The difference between...
- non-ionising electromagnetic fields
- optical radiation
- ionising radiation
12The electromagneticspectrum
- visible / invisible - detect directly /
indirectly. - Radio waves, microwaves, infra red, visible
light, ultra violet, X-rays, gamma rays
13X-ray generators
14Ionisation
15Radioactivity /Radioactive decay
16Atomselementsisotopes
17Particle radiation
18Half-life
- radioactivity disappears naturally
19Natural radioactivity
20DEMONSTRATION
- End window Geiger or
- dual phosphor scintillation probe
- Cornish granite
- potash fertiliser
- Lo-salt
- thorium coated gas mantle or welding rod
- luminous watches (radium and tritium)
- A small air sampler
- radon daughters
21BACKGROUNDRADIATION
- Components
- terrestrial (including radon)
- cosmic
- medical
- man-made
22A radioactive world
- Humans and animals evolved in a radioactive
world - We are all exposed to radiation and the human
race always has been - Remember half-life
23EFFECTSOF RADIATION
- What radiation does and doesn't do
- Cell damage and acute and chronic consequences
24Effects of sunlight
- Short-term local heating, sunburn
- limit time of exposure
- shield with sun creams
- long term skin cancer
- can't predict who will get it, but we find more
cancers in people who have been exposed to the
most sun (Australia)
25Acute effects oflarge doses of ionising
radiation
- radiation burns, organ damage
- shielding
- limit working times
- protective clothing (tools of the trade)
- internal / external contamination (dung heap
analogy).
26Long term effects
- epidemiology and difficulties with statistics -
impact of "normal" cancer levels and background
radiation exposure - compare with skin cancer and sun
27Dose
- one unit (Sievert) has been derived to allow
comparisons between the different effects of
alpha, beta, gamma and whether exposure is to the
whole body or to specific organs
28SETTING LIMITS
- Internationally agreed rules have evolved to
protect workers and the public from the effects
of radiation - Standards have changed with time
- The profession is not arrogant enough to think
that we will ever get them absolutely right - so
continuous process of review.
29Threefundamental principles
- Keep radiation as low as reasonably practicable
to minimise long term effects - Justify all exposure by considering the benefits
- Keep all exposure within legal limits
30Limits
- set to prevent acute effects and to provide a
legal backstop - just exceeding a limit is not a life or death
matter but it does show that safety may not be
given the right level of management priority
31BENEFITSFROM THE USE OF IONISING RADIATION
- Medicine
- diagnostic x-rays
- CAT scanners
- tracers
- cancer therapy
32 - Industrial
- large-scale electricity generation
- marine propulsion
- thickness detectors
- level detectors
- fire detectors
- tracers
- industrial radiography
33 - Research
- tracers in biological research, geology, carbon
dating etc.
34LIVINGWITH THE RISKS
- System of radiological protection is there
because society recognises that there is a risk
35Living is a risky business
common annual risks of death
36The radiological protection specialists' job is...
- to minimise the risks from using radiation.
37CONCLUSION
- Radiological protection is about trust
- Members of the Society who work for the big users
of radiation do so in the knowledge that they and
their employers have a legal responsibility not
only for the safety of workers, but also the
public who live around their factories, hospitals
or power stations.
38 - They achieve safety by gaining the trust of these
people by an honest approach on the risks of
radiation, discussing safety openly. - This is done with regular staff training, working
with Trades Union appointed Safety
representatives and regular meetings with
representatives of the local community.
39 - The ability to empathise with the full
cross-section of society, from managing directors
to shop stewards to concerned members of the
public is a key quality of radiological
protection specialists.
40Legal framework ofprotection
- Many Society members work for the Nuclear
Installations Inspectorate the Environment
Agency the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries
and Food. (Or Scottish/Welsh equivalents). - These bodies enforce the various regulations
- but also provide advice and can act as sounding
boards when users are deciding how to approach a
particular issue.
41Independent advice...
- to everyone in the business comes from the
National Radiological Protection Board - a statutory body
42People meet together
- People from all these organisations and
businesses meet together in the Society for
Radiological Protection. Our Society provides a
forum for radiation safety issues to be debated
in a proper scientific manner.
43Objective
- Our members all share the same objective - that
the benefits of working and living with radiation
will always outweigh the risks.
44www.srp-uk.org
The Society for Radiological Protection