Title: Radiation Shielding Information and Guidance
1Radiation Shielding Information and Guidance
- Don Parry, Health Physicist
- Michigan Department of Consumer Industry
Services - Radiation Safety Section
- dparry_at_michigan.gov
2Radiation Shielding Information
- Plan Reviews
- Plans should be submitted prior to construction!
- Rule 331(2) of the Ionizing Radiation Rules
states that shielding is subject to design
approval by the department - Most medical x-ray rooms should normally be
provided with 1/8 inch thick lead for primary
barriers (including floors) and 1/16 inch thick
lead for secondary barriers (including doors) - Construction of an x-ray room without an approved
plan may cause shielding modifications to be done
after the room is constructed
3Radiation Shielding Information
- Form BHS/HFS 852 Information Required for a
Radiation Shielding Plan Review - Available on Web site
- Be sure to include all requested information
including - Plans or blueprints of rooms and adjacent areas
to scale with compass directions. (1/4 1 foot
preferred) - Location of x-ray equipment, x-ray table,wall
bucky, exposure switch, viewing window and
control panel - Description of occupancy of adjoining areas
including above or below - Description of floor and ceiling construction
including minimum concrete thickness and density.
4Radiation Shielding Information
- Form BHS/HFS 852 (Continued)
- Be sure to include all requested information
including - Location,type, thickness and height of proposed
shielding - Indicate thickness and density of concrete and
masonry materials - Limits of travel of table, tube and image
receptor - Maximum kVp, mA and estimated workload in
mAmin/wk - For CT scanners, include a copy of the
iso-exposure curves normally provided by the
manufacturer - Name and address of facility
- Name and address to send response letter
5Radiation Shielding Information
- Shielding Guidance
- Barriers should be designed for weekly radiation
dose limits of 10 millirem per week for
controlled area and 0.5 millirem per week for
uncontrolled areas - Vertical barriers must extend from the floor to a
minimum height of 7 feet. - If it is necessary to add additional shielding to
the ceiling of the room, then the shielding in
the walls must be extended above the 7-foot
height to overlap the ceiling shielding.
6Radiation Shielding Information
- Shielding Guidance
- If there are multi story buildings in close
proximity of the x-ray room, which have occupied
spaces that could be exposed to scatter radiation
that is not attenuated by the 7-foot high wall
shielding, additional shielding may be necessary
to protect those areas - Outside walls and, particularly, windows may
require shielding to protect distant areas even
if the nearest occupied area is not immediately
adjacent
7Radiation Shielding Information
- Operator Booth Shielding Guidance
- The lead glass viewing window should have an area
of at least 1 square foot - At least 1 square foot of the viewing window
should be centered no less than 2 feet from the
open edge of the booth and be centered 5 feet
from the floor. - The operator should be allotted not less than 7.5
square feet of unobstructed floor space in the
booth
8Radiation Shielding Information
- Operator Booth Shielding Guidance
- The operators booth should have no dimension
less than 2 feet. - The exposure switch needs to be permanently
fastened behind the operators barrier so that
the operator is protected from primary,
first-scattered, and leakage radiation, even at
arms length from the switch. - The booth shall be located or constructed such
that unattenuated direct scatter radiation
originating on the examination table or at the
wall-mounted image receptor will not reach the
operator's position in the booth. - Additional guidance available on web site
9Radiation Shielding Information
- Certificate of Need
- Equipment that requires a CON will not be
registered until plans have been reviewed by the
Radiation Safety Section. - At least 1/16 inch lead normally is required for
the walls of a CT room. CT rooms with high
workloads and adjacent uncontrolled occupied
areas may need shielding that is thicker than
1/16 inch lead. - Facilities with CT x-ray equipment may want to
enlist the services of a qualified medical
physicist for shielding advice. Plans would
still need to be submitted to RSS for review.
10Radiation Shielding Information
- Dental Cephalometric and Tomographic Equipment.
- Dental cephalometric equipment requires shielding
of the primary beam with 1/16 inch thick lead - Dental Tomographic equipment requires primary
beam shielding along with a fixed operators
barrier with an exposure switch in a location at
least arms length from the line of scatter. - Dental extra oral facilities should submit plans
for review and approval to the RSS
11Radiation Shielding Information
- Floors
- Need to use minimum thickness of concrete floor
in shielding calculations - Need to know density of concrete (147 lbs/ft3
standard)
12Radiation Shielding Information
- Examples
- No Occupancy above or below
- On Slab
- Shielding should be floor to 7
- 1/16 inch thick secondary, 1/8 inch thick primary
1/8 inch lead (blue)
Leakage
Scatter
1/16 inch lead (red)
13Radiation Shielding Information
- Examples
- Occupied space below
- Need 1/16 inch thick lead on floor with 1/8 thick
lead under table - Floor shielding should overlap wall shielding
14Radiation Shielding Information
- Examples
- Crawl space
- Occupied space above
- Need lead in floor under table to prevent scatter
under vertical barriers
Wall shielding needs to overlap ceiling shielding
15Radiation Shielding Information
- Examples
- CT with adjacent Multi Story Building
- May need additional shielding on outside wall
Occupied uncontrolled space in adjacent building
Adjacent Multi Story Building
16Radiation Shielding Information
- Examples
- Exposure switch location
Switch needs to be arms length from first
scattered and leakage radiation
Switch Location
Adjacent Multi Story Building
17Radiation Shielding Information
- Summary
- Submit shielding plans to the Radiation Safety
Section for design approval prior to
construction! - Dental extraoral equipment such as cephalometric
and tomographic units should also have shielding
plans approved. - Include all information requested on form BHS/HFS
852. - Equipment that requires a Certificate of Need
will not be registered until a plan is reviewed - Most rooms will be adequately shielded with 1/8
inch thick lead for primary barriers and 1/16
inch thick lead for secondary barriers. - Be sure to consider areas above and below the
x-ray room when designing shielding.
18Contact Information
- HeadquartersRadiation Safety SectionMichigan
Department of Consumer Industry ServicesP.O.
Box 30664Lansing, Michigan 48909 Phone (517)
241-1989Fax (517) 241-1981 - Visitor/delivery address5th Floor, G. Mennen
Williams Building525 W. Ottawa StreetLansing,
Michigan 48933 - District OfficeOur district office, formerly in
Pontiac, has moved to Radiation Safety
SectionMichigan Department of Consumer
Industry Services38600 Van Dyke, Suite
375Sterling Heights, Michigan 48312 - Phone (586) 446-0200Fax (586) 446-0227