Title: Radiation Protection in Nuclear Medicine
1Part 12
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection
in Nuclear Medicine
Protection of the General Public
2Objective
- To become aware of the BSS requirements for the
protection of the public and how these are
applied to restrictions in the care of the
nuclear medicine patients as well as the design
and operation of a nuclear medicine facility
3Content
- Dose limits
- Design considerations
- The patient
- Special problems
- Transportation
4Exposure of the general public
- Spread of contamination outside the department
- Lost sources
- The nuclear medicine patient
- Disposal of radioactive waste
- Transportation of sources
5RESPONSIBILITIES
- BSS III.1. Registrants and licensees shall apply
the requirements of the Standards as specified by
the Regulatory Authority to any public exposure
delivered by a practice or source for which they
are responsible, unless the exposure is excluded
from the Standards or the practice or source
delivering the exposure is exempted from the
requirements of the Standards.
6Module 12.1. Dose limits
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Nuclear Medicine
Part 12 Protection of the General Public
7(No Transcript)
8DOSE CONSTRAINTS
- If nationally not available, the local Radiation
Protection - Committee, should establish appropriate dose
constraints, such as -
- Co-workers to the patient, and other members of
the general public 0.3 mSv/procedure
9Module 12.2. Design considerationsWorking
procedures
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Nuclear Medicine
Part 12 Protection of the General Public
10RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION
- BSS III.7. Registrants and licensees shall
ensure that - (a) for sources for which they are responsible,
measures that are optimized in
accordance with the requirements of the
Standards be taken as appropriate for restricting
public exposure to contamination in
areas accessible to the public and - (b) specific containment provisions be
established for the construction and
operation of a source that could cause
spread of contamination in areas accessible to
the public.
11Reduce the risk of uncontrolled contamination
- Classification of areas
- Well trained staff
- Documented safe procedures in the handling of
radiopharmaceuticals (receipt, preparation,
administration, waste disposal) - Workplace monitoring
12Layout of a nuclear medicine department
From high to low activity
13CLASSIFICATION OF AREAS
- Controlled area
- Supervised area
14CONTROL OF VISITORS
- BSS III.5. Registrants and licensees, in
co-operation with employers when appropriate,
shall - (a) ensure that visitors be accompanied in any
controlled area by a person
knowledgeable about the protection and safety
measures for that area - (b) provide adequate information and instruction
to visitors before they enter a
controlled area so as to ensure
appropriate protection of the visitors and of
other individuals who could be affected
by their actions and - (c) ensure that adequate control over entry of
visitors to a supervised area be
maintained and that appropriate signs be
posted in such areas.
15Patient areas
- Separation of radioactive patients and other
patients waiting is an - example of good practice, especially in a busy
department. - Separate toilet room for the exclusive use of
injected patients should - always be considered. This patient washroom
should not be used by - general public or hospital staff as it is
likely that the floor, toilet seat and sink
faucet handles will be contaminated
frequently.
16STRUCTURAL SHIELDING
- The absorbed dose is determined by factors such
as - source strength
- length of exposure
- distance from the source
- transmission through the protective barrier.
Patient with I-131
General public
D mSv/h
0.3 mSv/procedure
Distance d
17STORAGE OF SOURCES
- locked to prevent unauthorized use
- and theft
- warning sign
- shielded to lt2 uSv/h at 1m
- (permanently occupied areas)
- alternatively lt20 uSv/h at 1 m
- (temporarily occupied areas)
- inventory record
18RADIOACTIVE WASTE
- BSS III.8. Registrants and licensees shall
- (a) ensure that the activity and volume of any
radioactive waste that results from the sources
for which they are responsible be kept to the
minimum practicable, and that the waste be
managed, i.e. collected, handled, treated,
conditioned, transported, stored and disposed of,
in accordance with the requirements of the
Standards and any other applicable standard 26
and - (b) segregate, and treat separately if
appropriate, different types of radioactive waste
where warranted by differences in factors such as
radionuclide content, half-life, concentration,
volume and physical and chemical properties,
taking into account the available options for
waste disposal.
19Discharge of radioactive substances
- BSS III.9. Registrants and licensees shall
ensure that radioactive substances from
authorized practices and sources not be
discharged to the environment unless - (a) the discharge is within the discharge limits
authorized by the Regulatory
Authority - (b) the discharges are controlled
- (c) the public exposures committed by the
discharges are limited as specified in
Schedule II and - (d) the control of the discharges is optimized
in accordance with the Principal
Requirements of the Standards.
20Module 12.3. The patient
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Nuclear Medicine
Part 12 Protection of the General Public
21The radioactive patient
- Uncontrolled radioactive source that causes
external exposure and contamination of the
general public?
YES! (after leaving the hospital)
22The Radioactive Patient
Contamination
External saliva
perspiration breath urine
0.5 0.1 0.06 0.03 mSv/h
1000 MBq I-131
0 0.5 1 2
m
23The radioactive patient
Exposure of general public
Release the patient without any restrictions
- Release the patient with restrictions
Keep the patient in the hospital
24Patient survey
- The dose rate at 1 m from the patient should be
down to an acceptable level established by the
RPC. - Hospitalize
- gt1100 MBq I-131
- Release with restrictions
- Treatment of thyrotoxicosis
- Pain palliation (Sr-89, Sm-153)
- Lactating women (specified procedures)
- Release without restrictions
- Diagnostic procedures
25INSTRUCTIONS TO OUT-PATIENTS(Example to minimize
exposure of the general public)
-
- Use only a WC and flush 2-3 times. Keep the
toilet and the floor clean. - Wash Your hands frequently and take a shower
every day. - Avoid close contact to members of the family,
children and pregnant women etc according to the
time table attached - Avoid solid waste
-
Off work 6d Avoid close contact
withchildren and pregnant women 20 d Public
travel 1h/day (1st week)
26Module 12.4. Special problems
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Nuclear Medicine
Part 12 Protection of the General Public
27DEATH OF PATIENT
In the event of death of a patient who has
recently received a therapeutic dose of a
radionuclide care has to be taken to ensure that
personnel receive as low dose as possible at all
stages prior to the burial or cremation.
Activity (MBq)
(UK)
28DEATH OF PATIENT
- Precautions that should be given are depending on
the residual activity - and the expert advice provided by the RPO and may
involve the following - preparation for burial or cremation should be
controlled by a - competent person,
- relatives should be prevented from coming into
close contact with the - body,
- people should not be allowed to linger in the
presence of the coffin, - all personnel involved in handling the corpse
should be instructed by - the RPO and monitored if appropriate,
- all objects, clothes, documents etc that might
have been in contact - with the deceased must be tested for
contamination, - it may be expedient to wrap the cadaver in
waterproof material - immediately after death to prevent spread of
contaminated body fluids, - embalming of cadavers should, if possible, be
avoided, - autopsy of a highly radioactive cadavers should
be restricted to the - absolute minimum
29Module 12.5. Transportation
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Nuclear Medicine
Part 12 Protection of the General Public
30TRANSPORT CONTAINER
Cartoon Liner Sealed can Liner Lead
container Source
31Transport Container
32Transport Index (TI)
1.0 m
TI max dose-rate _at_ 1.0m (?Sv/h)
10
33White-I Label
- lt 5.0 ?Sv/h _at_ surface
- lt 0.05 ?Sv/h _at_ 1.0 m
- TI 0
34Yellow-II Label
- lt 500 ?Sv/h, gt 5 ?Sv/h
- _at_ surface
- lt 10 ?Sv/h _at_ 1.0 m
- 0 lt TI lt 1.0
35Yellow-III Label
- gt 500 ?Sv/h,lt 2000?Sv/h
- _at_ surface
- gt 10?Sv/h, lt 100?Sv/h
- _at_ 1.0m
- 1.0 lt TI lt 10
36Vehicle Placards
3 placards on vehicle
37Consignors Responsibilities
- all labelling and placarding
- provision of transport documents
- provision of local rules and any other relevant
information
38Internal transport
If the administration of radiopharmaceutical to
the patient takes place far from the dispensing
room, use a transport container with absorbent
pads. Make sure that a warning sign is on the
container together with patient name, activity
and date. Travel by the most direct route
avoiding more heavily occupied areas
39Questions?
40DISCUSSION
You get a phone-call from a colleague in
another hospital about 0.5 h away. He is in an
urgent need of Tc99m-MAA for a lung scan. Can
you help him?
41DISCUSSION
You get a phone call from a relative to a patient
whoyesterday got 4 GBq Sm-153. The patient died
at hometoday. What to do?
42DISCUSSION
A patient has received 300 MBq I-131 in a
treatmentof thyrotoxicosis. She is working in a
school preparingfood for the children. She was
told to stay off work for2 weeks. You get a
message that she actually wentback to work the
day after the treatment, which was10 days ago.
What to do?
43Where to Get More Information
- Other sessions
- Part 4. Security of sources, Design of facilities
- Part 5. Occupational protection
- Part 6. Medical exposure
- Part 8. Optimization of medical exposure.
Therapeutic procedures - Part 10. Radioactive waste
- Further readings
- IAEA Basic Safety Standards
- IAEA Model regulations on radiation safety in
nuclear medicine (in preparation) - WHO. Manual on Radiation Protection in Hospitals
and General Practices. Volume 4 Nuclear Medicine
(in preparation)