Abstract
WORK with radioactive substances in universities and hospitals is subject to codes of practice1,2 which require the “designation” of a person unless it is most unlikely that they will receive more than three-tenths of the annual maximum permissible dose. This criterion is easier to apply to persons exposed to external radiation only than to those using unsealed radioactive substances where there is the additional requirement of adequate precautions against contamination. I shall set out here criteria for designating individuals working with unsealed sources.
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References
Code of Practice for the Protection of Persons Exposed to Ionizing Radiations in Research and Teaching (Department of Employment and Productivity, HMSO, London, 1968).
Code of Practice for the Protection of Persons against Ionizing Radiations arising from Medical and Dental Use (Department of Education and Science and Ministry of Health, HMSO, London, 1964).
Duggan, M. J., Greenslade, E., and Jones, B. E., Nature, 221, 831 (1969).
Oliver, R., Brit. J. Radiol., 42, 397 (1969).
Recommendations of the International Commission on Radiological Protection, ICRP Publication 2 (Pergamon Press, 1959).
Franke, T., Herrmann, G., and Hunzinger, W., Proc. Intern. Symp., Radiation Protection of the Worker by the Design and Control of his Environment, Bournemouth (Society for Radiation Protection, 1966).
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HUGHES, D. Administrative Criteria for the “Designation” of Persons working with Unsealed Sources of Radioactive Substances. Nature 224, 728 (1969). https://doi.org/10.1038/224728a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/224728a0
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