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RE: "Becquerels NEVER!", formerly Re: medical misadministration to child
Bill,
I agree with you. On top of the conversion cost, the industry would be set for one very large human performance headache.
Respectfully,
Bob Mages
Robert Mages, RRPT
Technical Specialist III (NUC)
Indian Point Unit 2
Entergy Nuclear Northeast
Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc.
Indian Point Energy Center
295 Broadway, Suite 1
P.O. Box 249
Buchanan, New York 10511-0249
Phone: (914) 271-7340
Fax: (914) 734-5642
email: rmages@entergy.com
-----Original Message-----
From: William V Lipton [mailto:liptonw@DTEENERGY.COM]
Sent: Monday, April 07, 2003 7:14 AM
To: Michael G. Stabin
Cc: radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu
Subject: "Becquerels NEVER!", formerly Re: medical misadministration to
child
There are three reasons we should stay with the traditional units:
1. They're better: The traditional units are based on real quantities, e.g., a
Ci is a gram of radium. They thus tend to be more intuitive: a uCi is a small
quantity of radioactive material, a mCi is a medium quantity, and a Ci is a
lot. A mrad is a small dose, a rad is a significant dose, and multiple rads are
serious. You tend not to need as many prefixes. It's much harder to relate to
a MBq.
2. It would be time consuming and expensive to convert. I hate to think of the
thousands of meter dials that would have to be changed, the thousands of
procedures that would have to be rewritten, and the thousands of hours of
training required to implement SI at our nuclear power plants. Any reasonable
cost versus benefit analysis would tell you, "no way."
3. It would create a human factors disaster. If professional hp's make
mistakes in conversion, how can we expect our employees to suddenly switch to a
new system. It's the equivalent of saying that, starting tomorrow, everyone
should drive on the left side of the road. Any reasonable risk versus benefit
analysis would tell you, "no way."
If America always went along with "the rest of the world," Sadam Hussein would
still be making WMD's and gassing his own people.
The opinions expressed are strictly mine.
It's not about dose, it's about trust.
Curies forever.
Bill Lipton
liptonw@dteenergy.com
"Michael G. Stabin" wrote:
> From: "William V Lipton"
> > This very common error is why I am so much against forcing SI units onto
> operational hp's.
> > Curies forever, Becquerels NEVER.
>
> It's the conversions *between* unit systems that cause problems, and will
> cause more and more problems as the US refuses to join the rest of the world
> and use SI. And then *within* a unit system, what is easier to remember, 1
> dis/s or 3.7x10^10 dis/s? What is easier to convert, 1 liter = 1000 ml or 1
> qt = 32 oz, 1 km = 1000 m or 1 mi = 5280 ft, etc.? Switching to SI and
> allowing these clumsy units to disappear in the rear view mirror is clearly
> in the best interests of the workers and patients we are trying to protect.
> Continuing to resist joining the world scientific community and doing these
> conversions between unit systems will certainly result in more
> miscalculations, on that we can agree.
>
> Mike
>
> Michael G. Stabin, PhD, CHP
> Assistant Professor of Radiology and Radiological Sciences
> Department of Radiology and Radiological Sciences
> Vanderbilt University
> 1161 21st Avenue South
> Nashville, TN 37232-2675
> Phone (615) 343-0068
> Fax (615) 322-3764
> Pager (615) 835-5153
> e-mail michael.g.stabin@vanderbilt.edu
> internet www.doseinfo-radar.com
>
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