Title: The ICRP System of Radiological Protection
1The ICRP System of Radiological Protection
2Overview
- Historical Background
- ICRP Publication 60
- More Recent Publications
- Controllable Dose
3Aims and Scope
- To be of help to regulatory and advisory agencies
at national, regional and international levels,
mainly by providing advice on fundamental
principles - To provide guidance to management, their advisors
and individuals, such as radiologists, who have
to make decisions about the use of ionising
radiations - To provide an appropriate standard of protection
for man without unduly limiting the beneficial
practices giving rise to radiation exposure
4Limitations
- Confined to protection against ionising
radiations. - Consider that the standard of environmental
control needed to protect man to the degree
currently thought desirable will ensure that
other species are not put at risk. Occasionally,
individual members of non-human species might be
harmed, but not to the extent of endangering
whole species or creating imbalance between
species.
5Dosimetric Considerations
6Radiation Weighting Factors
- Photons 1
- Electrons and muons 1
- Neutrons lt10 keV 5
- 10 - 100 keV 10
- 100 keV - 2 MeV 20
- 2 MeV - 20 MeV 10
- gt20 MeV 5
- Protons, other than recoil protons, gt2 MeV 5
- Alpha particles, fission fragments, heavy
nuclei 20
7Tissue Weighting Factors
8The Inclusion of Non-Fatal Cancer
- Fk.F(1-k)/kF(2-k)
- Fk.P
- P(2-k)k
9Significant Statements on Biological Effects - 1
- A distinction is made between change, damage,
harm and detriment - Data on hormesis are not sufficient to take them
into account - Detriment is restricted to health detriment
- The biological information needed in radiation
protection is drawn, to the maximum extent
possible, from data on radiation effects in
humans - Non-stochastic effects are renamed
deterministic
10Significant Statements on Biological Effects - 2
- Cancers induced by radiation do not have
distinguishable characteristics - Individuals may differ somewhat in their
sensitivities to the induction of cancer by
radiation - No stochastic effects other than cancer and
benign tumours are induced by radiation - There continues to be a justifiable basis for
using a linear dose-response relationship without
threshold for cancer induction at low doses and
dose rates
11Significant Statements on Biological Effects - 3
- There is sufficient evidence to justify making an
allowance for non-linearity when interpreting
data for low-LET radiation at high doses and dose
rates - A Dose and Dose Rate Effectiveness Factor of 2 is
used for all equivalent doses resulting from
absorbed doses below 0.2 Gy and from higher
absorbed doses when the dose rate is less than
0.1 Gy/h
12Significant Statements on Biological Effects - 4
- The probability of fatal cancer at low doses and
dose rates is estimated as 0.04 per Sv for
workers and 0.05 per Sv for whole populations
including children - In the case of lung cancer from inhaled radon
progeny, it is reasonable to express the
attributable risk coefficient per unit of radon
exposure and not per unit dose to the lung or
bronchial epithelium
13Significant Statements on Biological Effects - 5
- Radiation has not been identified as a cause of
hereditary disorders in man - Nominal hereditary effect coefficients of 0.01
per Sv for the whole population and 0.006 per Sv
for workers adequately represent the severity
weighted number of hereditary defects to be
expected in all generations - With additional weighting for years of life lost,
the corresponding numbers are 0.013 per Sv and
0.008 per Sv
14Significant Statements on Biological Effects - 6
- The induction of malformations due to antenatal
exposure is taken to be a deterministic effect
occurring from the third week after conception
(threshold 0.1 Gy) - With antenatal exposures between 8 and 25 weeks
post-conception, there is a general shift in the
IQ distribution with increasing dose and an
increase in the number of children classified as
severely mentally retarded - At doses of around 0.1 Sv, no effect would be
detectable on the general distribution of IQ
15The Conceptual Framework of Radiological
Protection - Objective
- To prevent the occurrence of deterministic
effects by keeping doses below the relevant
thresholds, and to ensure that all reasonable
steps are taken to reduce the induction of
stochastic effects
16General Principles for Proposed and Continuing
Practices
- Justification
- Optimisation of protection
- Individual dose and risk limits
17Justification
- No practice involving exposures to radiation
should be adopted unless it produces a sufficient
benefit to the exposed individuals or to society
to offset the radiation detriment it causes
18Optimisation
- The magnitude of individual doses, the number of
people exposed, and the likelihood of incurring
exposures should all be kept as low as reasonably
achievable, economic and social factors being
taken into account. - This procedure should be constrained by
restrictions on the doses to individuals, or the
risks to individuals in the case of potential
exposures, so as to limit the inequity likely to
result from the inherent economic and social
judgements.
19Dose and Risk Limits
- The exposure of individuals from all relevant
practices should be subject to dose limits, or to
some control of risks in the case of potential
exposures - Dose limits are aimed at ensuring that no
individual is exposed to radiation risks that are
judged to be unacceptable in any normal
circumstances - Not all sources are susceptible to control by
action at the source and it is necessary to
specify the sources to be included as relevant
before selecting a dose limit
20General Principles for Intervention
- The proposed intervention should do more good
than harm - The form, scale and duration of the intervention
should be optimised, i.e. the net benefit should
be maximised - Dose limits do not apply in intervention, but
there will be some level of projected dose above
which, because of serious deterministic effects,
intervention will almost always be justified
21Comments on the Conceptual Framework
- Justification requires only that the net benefit
of a practice be positive - to search for the
best of all the available options is usually a
task beyond the responsibility of radiological
protection agencies - Justification applies to the introduction of new
practices and the review of existing practices - Optimisation should be first applied at the
design stage of any project
22Comments on the Conceptual Framework
- Potential exposures need to be considered as part
of the assessment of practices, but may also lead
to calls for intervention - their implications
need to be considered in both contexts - In principle, risk limits should be associated
with potential exposures - There is an on-going requirement to assess the
effectiveness of any established system of
protection
23Proposed and Continuing Practices Occupational
Exposure
- Of the components of exposure to natural sources,
only radon in workplaces and work with minerals
containing natural radionuclides can reasonably
be regarded as the responsibility of the
operating management. - However, even these two components should be
regarded as excluded from occupational exposure
and treated separately, unless the relevant
regulatory agency has ruled otherwise, either for
a defined geographical area or for defined
practices. - Unless specific controls are in force relating to
natural sources, exposures to such sources need
not be included in radiation monitoring results.
24Proposed and Continuing Practices Occupational
Exposure
- If dose constraints are used, they should be
applicable to broad classes of operations, e.g.
routine operations of nuclear power plants - Occupational dose limits apply to all
occupational exposures, including those resulting
from minor mishaps and misjudgements
25Proposed and Continuing Practices Occupational
Exposure
- The recommended limit is 20 mSv/y, averaged over
5 years, with the further provision that
effective dose shall not exceed 50 mSv in any one
year - No special restrictions are required on the
subsequent exposure of an individual who has
exceeded a dose limit
26Proposed and Continuing Practices Occupational
Exposure
- The effective dose limit is the boundary of
tolerability - Dose limits for skin and lens of the eye are 500
mSv and 150 mSv, respectively - Annual Limits on Intake (ALIs) are based on a
committed effective dose of 20 mSv - Once pregnancy is declared, the conceptus should
be protected by applying a supplementary
equivalent dose limit to the surface of the
womans abdomen of 2 mSv for the remainder of
pregnancy and by limiting intakes of
radionuclides to about 1/20 of the ALI
27Proposed and Existing Practices Medical Exposure
- Each procedure (diagnostic or therapeutic) is, in
principle, subject to a separate justification - Diagnostic and therapeutic procedures causing
exposures of the abdomen of women likely to be
pregnant should be avoided unless there are
strong clinical indications
28Proposed and Existing Practices Public Exposure
- Dose limits and dose constraints are applicable
in relation to the mean dose to the critical
group - The dose limits relate only to practices -
radionuclides already present in the environment,
whether from natural or human-related sources,
are excluded - The limit for public exposure is 1 mSv in a year
- Dose limits for skin and lens of the eye are 50
mSv and 15 mSv per year, respectively
29Proposed and Existing Practices Potential
Exposure
- Where doses, should they occur, will not be in
excess of dose limits, it is adequate to use the
product of the expected dose and its probability
of occurrence as if this were a dose that is
certain to occur - If the dose is in excess of dose limits, this
simple approach is inadequate - Risk constraints should be defined applicable to
the attributable probability of death
30Proposed and Existing Practices Interactive
Situations
- Detriment due to public exposure should not be
treated differently from that due to occupational
exposure - The sum of effective doses from each type of
exposure from a given source should be used in
optimisation procedures
31Protection in Intervention
- The comparison of benefits and detriments should,
in the first place, be made for those at risk,
but impacts on the rest of society should be
considered - Social costs, including an allowance for anxiety,
should be included
32Protection in Intervention
- Exposures of emergency teams following accidents
should be limited by operational controls and the
doses should be treated separately from normal
doses - Exposures in the control of an accident and in
immediate and urgent remedial work should not
result in effective doses of more than about 0.5
Sv, except for life-saving actions - Once the emergency is under control, remedial
work should be treated as part of occupational
exposure
33Implementation of the Recommendations
- No specific dose level is recommended for
distinguishing between controlled and supervised
areas - Operating management should provide guides to
designers and operators on the maximum levels of
exposure that the management expects to occur in
defined operations and on the reliability needed
to limit potential exposures - These guides are not targets, but an envelope
within which designers and operators should work
to achieve optimisation
34Implementation of the Recommendations
- Exemption of sources is an important regulatory
function - Appropriate bases for exemption are that a source
gives rise to small individual and collective
doses and/or that no reasonable control
procedures can achieve significant reductions in
those doses - The extent to which small individual doses should
be included in the estimation of collective doses
depends on the degree to which the contribution
from these doses influences the choice between
options
35Recent Publications
- 77 Radiological Protection Policy for the
Disposal of Radioactive Waste - 78 Individual Monitoring for Internal Exposure
of Workers - 79 Genetic Susceptibility to Cancer
- 80 Radiation Dose to Patients from
Radiopharmaceuticals - 81 Radiation Protection Recommendations as
Applied to the Disposal of Long-lived Solid
Radioactive Waste
36Forthcoming Publications
- Dose Estimation to the Embryo and Fetus
- Risk Estimation for Multi-factorial Diseases
- Principles for Protection of the Public in
Situations of Prolonged Exposure - Reference Man Anatomy, Physiology and
Elemental Composition - Dosimetric Model for the Gastrointestinal Tract
37Genetic Susceptibility - 1
- Current estimates of cancer risk already include
an unknown contribution from genetically
radiosensitive sub-populations - The likely contribution to radiation risk from
familial cancer disorders is too low to generate
an unacceptable distortion of estimates of cancer
risk in most populations - There is insufficient knowledge to judge the
contribution to risk from mutations of low
penetrance
38Genetic Susceptibility - 2
- Because of the high risk of spontaneous cancer in
familial disorders, low doses of radiation are
unlikely to impact significantly on lifetime
cancer risk - At high doses, e.g. in radiotherapy, the relative
risk may become important - The utility of genetic testing is currently
limited by technical factors and concerns over
predictive power its future value in an
occupational context is open to doubt and would
be subject to ethical scrutiny
39Controllable Dose
- Is the linear, no-threshold concept more than a
convenient regulatory fiction? - Will contaminated land cleanup and
decommissioning require too great an expenditure
of resources? - Is collective dose evaluated over long-timescales
to large populations meaningful? - Why should we distinguish occupational, public
and medical exposures? - Why should we distinguish practices and
interventions?
40The Principle
- If the risk of harm to the health of the most
exposed individual is trivial, then the total
risk is trivial - irrespective of how many people
are exposed.
41The Rules
- Doses should not exceed about 30 mSv and this
level should be approached only if there is
benefit to the individual or the dose is
difficult to reduce or prevent - At around 3 mSv, there may be a need to reduce or
prevent doses, particularly if there is no
benefit to the individual - A dose of 0.3 mSv should be the maximum to an
individual who receives no direct benefit from
one source of radiation - A dose of 0.03 mSv presents a trivial risk to an
individual