RADIATION OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

RADIATION OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT

Description:

Health Physics Program. US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine. ... are greater than 20 microGy (2mR/hr), consult a health physicist ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:52
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: dunst
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: RADIATION OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT


1
RADIATION OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT
  • Health Physics Program
  • US Army Center for Health Promotion and
    Preventive Medicine

. SAMUEL G. DUNSTON samuel.dunston_at_apg.amedd.army.
mil (410) 436-3502 (DSN 584)
2
Terminal Learning Objectives
  • Determine the medical risk associated with
    radiation in a theater of operations.
  • Broadly understand the basis for radiation risk.
  • Know the resources for radiological measurements.

3
References
  • NRC Regulatory Guide 8-29
  • Tech Guide 238, Radiological Sources
  • BEIR V, National Research Council
  • NCRP 115 Risk Estimates Radiation Protection
  • TG 236A, Basic Dose Estimation
  • FM 3-100.12 Risk Management
  • NCRP 93, Radiation Exposure

4
Risk Assessment
Operational FM 3-100.12 and TG-248
OEG and RES Long-term Health Effects.
5
Outline
  • References
  • Radiation Risk Assessment
  • Current Standards
  • Radiation Effects
  • Radiation Measurement
  • Summary
  • Future Considerations

6
Operational Exposure Guide (OEG)
  • The maximum amount of nuclear radiation which
    the commander considers his unit may be permitted
    to receive while performing a particular mission
    or missions. (FM 100-30, Nuclear Operations)

7
Radiation Exposure State (RES)
  • Designed as a measure of external exposure,
    measured in cGy (rad)
  • Assigned to units as a whole
  • Used to determine units capacity to conduct
    missions, given specific OEG, which may have
    associated radiation exposure
  • RES 0 unexposed, RES 1 0ltgt75 cGy, RES 2
    75ltgt150, RES 3 gt150 cGy

8
Risk Estimation
  • Framed in terms of OEG and RES
  • Time allowed in specific radiation environment,
    given OEG
  • OEG recommendation based on mission time and
    specific radiation environment
  • Will record conservative estimate of dose

9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
NATO Standardization Agreement 2473 (STANAG 2473)
12
(No Transcript)
13
Risk Assessment
Operational FM 3-100.12 and TG-248
OEG and RES Long-term Health Effects.
14
Reg Guide 8.29
15
Radiation Effects,Dose Based
  • Acute
  • 50 cGy, deterministic limit
  • 75 cGy, negligible severity medical risk

16
(No Transcript)
17
Radiation Effects,Dose Based
  • Chronic
  • 5E-4 per cGy fatal cancer

18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
Inputs for the Tables
  • Radiation Doses or
  • Exposures and Exposure Scenarios

21
UDR-13
22
Contributions to thePublic Dose (.36 cGy)
Consumer Products 3
Medical 14
Other 1
Cosmic 8
Terrestrial 8
Internal 11
Inhaled 55
Source NCRP Report No. 93, Ionizing Radiation
Exposure of the Population of the United States,
1987
23
Exposure Pathways
  • Air
  • Water
  • Soil
  • Foodstuff
  • External

24
Sampling
  • Water
  • Soil
  • Air
  • Foodstuff
  • Units are mass not dose
  • If external radiation levels are greater than 20
    microGy (2mR/hr), consult a health physicist

25
AN/VDR-2

26
The 3 Level Concept
  • Level I
  • PM personnel with VDR-2
  • quick, rough estimate of risk
  • turnaround time of minutes to hours
  • simple execution (worksheets, tables)
  • overestimate of doses (conservative, best guess)
  • high degree of uncertainty, high lower limit of
    detection
  • Basic Radiological Dose Estimation- A Field Guide
    (TG-236A)

27
AN/PDR-77 Components
28
The 3 Level Concept
  • Level II
  • TAML (2 N4s, 2 72As, RPO kit, gamma spec,
    portable liquid scintillation, a/b counter )
  • greater turnaround time (hours-days)
  • more complex analysis
  • decreased uncertainty
  • lower limits of detection
  • Advanced Radiological Dose Estimation (TG-236B)

29
The 3 Level Concept
  • Level III
  • USACHPPM expertise and equipment
  • turnaround time of days-weeks
  • most accurate and precise estimate of risk
    (commensurate with US industry standard)
  • very low detection limits
  • legally defensible
  • retrospective, as well as prospective
  • Radiological Health Risk Assessment (TG-239)

30
 
31
Summary
  • If dose estimate 50 cGy or higher, then acute
    effects should be considered.
  • If external radiation levels are greater than 20
    microGy, get help.
  • Do occupational limits/standards apply?
  • What level of radiation support do you need?

32
Future(?) Doctrine
  • Recently, the perceived threat has shifted from
    acute radiation effects to potential long-term
    health effects from stability and support
    operations

33
Questions
  • ?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com