Actualised Laws about Atomic Energy: How to Apply them at Workplaces Exposed to Ionising Radiation?

T. Milassin, and Á. Kovács

State Public Health Service, Csongrád County Institute, Szeged, Hungary

CEJOEM 1997, Vol.3. No.4.:340

As it is known, the laws about nuclear energy were reconstructed in a modernised compact structure, conformably with the European laws in the years 1996 and 1997. The renewed laws reduced the upper limit of personal dose into 20 mSv/year from the former 50 mSv/year.
    We have a problem now: how can they be enforced in order to assure the compliance with the reduced dosage limit of employees? We chose the most dangerous workplaces for judging what changes are needed to be introduced to “keep up” with the new 60% reduced limits.
    In our region the highest risk is to be found at the medical radiotherapical institutions and the diagnostic laboratories that are working with radiating isotopes, sometimes in open vials.
    We checked the dose of ionising radiation in the exam-rooms where the physicians, physicists and the manual operators spend most of their working time. We measured the radiation in the immediate neighbouring area of the radiotherapic equipment and also in the controller’s zone. Measurements were also done in the waiting zones for the patients. For this region there are convenient, very low dose rate limits, only 2 mSv/year – for the same person yearly.
    Having completed all the measurements the personal dose can be calculated at the working points. At each measurement point there can be several persons, each of them with a different and individual factor to his/her occupation. Considering all the variations would take too much time, therefore we chose the modeling of a full-time man to be the ICRP Reference Man.
    The computed yearly doses based on the model agreed well with the measured personal doses. In assessing the personal dose the values evaluated by the Dosimetry Laboratory of the “Frédéric Joliot-Curie” National Research Institute for Radiobiology and Radiohygiene, were considered.
    The largest diagnostic laboratory was also checked where the full-time employees are working with radionuclides. According to the measurements one of the sources of the radiation can be the patients themselves. The practicing physician and the assistance can get irradiation from their patients.
    In this case the compiled dose was based on a statistically modelled place-time configuration. Extreme personal dose was measured on hands, eyes and forearms. The compiled dose was calculated by the weighting factors of ICRP given the known number of the personal dose. Based on the results the most dangerous areas in medicine are laboratories with radioisotopic methods.
    The good agreement between the dosimetric data and the compiled dose gave us an idea: the irradiation of the personnel in the examined Hungarian medical workplaces was lower than the confirmed dose limit because of the protection against the ionising radiation was more effective than it was expected by the old law. Consequently, it wont’t be too difficult to comply with the new laws that gave more personal safety.
    In special areas, e.g. at invasive radiology and some other places using radionuclid-methods, we should expect more measurements and other new measures to comply with the new rules that the higher safety requires. 
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