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RE: radiography - deja vu all over again



Mr. Lipton,



The real question is when will people stop ignoring the rules?  Alarming

rate meters were added as a regulation because radiographers wouldn't carry

an instrument.  After that the NRC adopted a rule that each radiographer

must be tested and carry a certificate that could be yanked if they did

anything wrong.  Radiographers continue to screw-up, Doctors continue to run

neck-in-neck with radiographers in screw-ups when using isotopes with far

broader effects and at a much higher frequency.  When will the NRC do

something about them?  



This incident didn't happen in NRC jurisdiction, but in Texas, one of the

toughest and best regulated radiography agreement state programs.  What more

do you want the NRC to do?  Hold the hand of every radiographer during every

shot across the nation!  While they are at it they should be double checking

every doctor and hospital any time they use any isotope for treatment or

testing.



No more rules, lets just enforce the ones we have.  If the radiographer

loses his job, then the next guy might think before acting.







This is my opinion and only mine, not the U.S. Navy's.



Tim Hart

Radiation Protection Manager

NAVSEADET RASO

NWS P.O. Drawer 260

Yorktown, VA 23691-0260



Commercial: (757) 887-4692

DSN:  953-4692

Fax:  (757) 887-3235



"The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him

absolutely no good." - Samuel Johnson 









-----Original Message-----

From: William V Lipton [mailto:liptonw@DTEENERGY.COM]

Sent: Tuesday, May 20, 2003 11:48 AM

To: radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu

Subject: radiography - deja vu all over again





Please see the attached item from the March 20, 2003, NRC Daily Event

Report.  Here's another preventable radiography incident.



my usual question:  When is the NRC going to start taking radiography

seriously?



Also, some key information seems to be missing from the report.  The

sequence of events seems to be:  (1) source exposed for shot, (2)

radiographer leaves work area prior to cranking back source, (3)

radiographer returns, changes film,and moves guide tube with source

still exposed.  The report then states, "At this point, he realized that

his survey meter had pegged high, and remembered that he had not cranked

the source back in prior to moving it..."



Assuming that TX regulations are similar to NRC regulations, consider 10

CFR 34.47(a):  "The licensee may not permit any individual to act as a

radiographer or a radiographer's assistant unless, at all times during

radiographic operations, each individual wears, on the trunk of the

body, ... an operating alarm ratemeter..."



I think it's just this scenario that the regulators had in mind when

they required an alarm ratemeter.  Where was it?



BTW, they were very lucky that the source had decayed down to 26 Ci.  If

I remember correctly, a fresh source is 80 - 100 Ci, which probably

would have caused an overexposure.



The opinions expressed are strictly mine.

It's not about dose, it's about trust.

Curies forever.



Bill Lipton

liptonw@dteenergy.com









AGREEMENT STATE

REPORT                                                       |

|

|

| The licensee reported a potential overexposure to a radiographer who

was     |

| x-raying some pipes at a worksite.  After completing a section of

piping,    |

| the radiographer should have cranked his source back in, but was

interrupted |

| by another technician and left his work area.  When he returned,

the         |

| radiographer changed out his film, and moved the guide tube to

another       |

| section of piping to begin more x-rays.  At this point, he realized

that his |

| survey meter had pegged high, and remembered that he had not cranked

the     |

| source back in prior to moving it.  He proceeded to immediately crank

the    |

| source back to its fully shielded position.  The exact time and

distance     |

| from the source for the radiographer's exposure is unknown, and the

licensee |

| is attempting to re-create the

scenario.                                     |

|

|

| The source was 26 Curies of Iridium 192, model number INC-32.  The

serial    |

| number is unknown at this time.  A preliminary investigation by the

licensee |

| estimates the radiographer's exposure to 800-900 millirem whole body.

There |

| is currently no exposure estimate for his

hands/extremities.                 |

|

|

| The radiographer's badge was sent off for processing.  Results will

be       |

| reported on 5/16/03 to the NRC.  The Texas Department of Health is

sending   |

| an additional inspector to the site to

investigate.                          |

|

|

|

|

| * * * UPDATE ON 5/16/03  @ 1120 BY  WATKINS TO GOULD * *

*                   |

|

|

| Blazer Industrial Radiography brought in a consultant to perform

preliminary |

| dose calculations for the whole body and the right hand of the

radiographer. |

| The results were 1.3R for the whole body and 37.1R for the right

hand,       |

| neither of which exceeds the annual regulatory

limit.                        |

+---------------------------------------------------------------------------

---+











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