[ RadSafe ] " -overradiated by CT scans"
Brennan, Mike (DOH)
Mike.Brennan at DOH.WA.GOV
Wed Feb 10 11:08:00 CST 2010
Hi, Howard.
You are, of course, completely correct that there are many, many, things where an 8x over recommended dose/amount/time could have deadly effects. I also agree without reservation that radiophobia is a counterproductive attitude that has almost certainly cost more lives than it has saved, especially when it has been expanded to industrial and environmental policy.
That being said, there is no excuse, none whatsoever, for patients to get the wrong exposure/medicine/treatment. The fixes to prevent these are administrative and technical, with all the tech being well established and many easier to use than the current systems. Much can be done with check lists, where people have to read and check each step (and no, it doesn't slow down the process, not when you factor in even the rare time that some step gets missed, and corrective action needs to be taken). Another fix would be to include an RF tag in the patient ID bracelet, and use it to make sure that the right prescriptions, treatments, etc, go to the right patients.
I consider this to be more of a medical industry failure than a radiation industry failure.
-----Original Message-----
From: radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl [mailto:radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl] On Behalf Of HOWARD.LONG at comcast.net
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 8:35 AM
To: Kyle Harness
Cc: radsafe at radlab.nl
Subject: [ RadSafe ] " -overradiated by CT scans"
" NY Times - more than 300 patients in four hospitals were overradiated by powerful CT scans used to detect strokes. The overdoses were first discovered last year at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, where patients received up to eight times as much radiation as intended.
"The errors occurred over 18 months and were detected only after patients lost their hair."
What would happen with 8x sunbath or UV tanning salon exposure or dose of coumadin (rat poison taken by millions to save thousands of lives from clots)? Smell burning skin or write obituaties, instead of hair loss!
This radiophobia is pretext to expand larceny of government, which now increases salaries while private pay is cut! I believe those hospitals will suffer reputation harm far more safety-inducing than oppressive "oversight".
How about the millions of people scared out of CTs in cancer-inhibiting doses that would detect unsuspected kidney cancer, dubious brain clots, etc. (10 to100 mSv)?
Howard Long, family doctor, Pleasanton CA
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kyle Harness" <kharness at ohmartvega.com>
To: radsafe at radlab.nl
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 6:55:39 AM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific
Subject: [ RadSafe ] (no subject)
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/10/health/policy/10radiation.html
Some food for thought for my fellow Radsafers. Looks like the FDA is
finally addressing all of the over-exposures that occur daily in this
country.
Kyle Harness
Radiation Safety Officer
Ohmart/VEGA Corp.
4241 Allendorf Drive
Cincinnati, Ohio 45209 USA
[tel] 513.272.0524 ext. 211
[cell] 513.432.4504
[fax] 513.272.4390
www <http://www.ohmartvega.com/> .ohmartvega.com
KHarness at ohmartvega.com
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