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The recent thread on minimization of badging brings me to refer all to
the January/February 1996 "Radiation Protection Management" article on
Whiting v. Boston Edison, Co., Radiation Litigation Update - An
important legal development in controlling expert testimony based on
"Junk Science". While the bulk of the article deals with two
so-called Radiation Experts who felt that they could "reconstruct"
radiation exposure to prove the radiation exposure received by Gary
Whiting who worked at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Plant from August 1977
to May 1980. He developed Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL) and died
in 1983. All is a rare form of leukemia.
The article itself is well written and is worth reading just for the
impact of the disqualification criteria established by a federal court
in Boston, however, the part that interested me the most, and should
be of interest to all who wonder "to badge or not to badge, that is
the question?" is contained as follows:
* A dose reconstruction is appropriate only when primary data from
TLDs and SRPDs are not available. The court stated:
Only in the absence of primary of secondary data is dose
reconstruction performed...Plaintiff has not brought to the court's
attention "any peer support for Dr. &&&&'s departure from the accepted
methodology of dose reconstruction" or any evidence of a convincing
nature justifying a lack of confidence in the relevant dose records.*
Thus a court that chooses to follow the decision in Whiting may hold
that if a plaintiff's dose was actually measured, a plaintiff MAY NOT
SUBSTITUTE A DOSE "RECONSTRUCTION" for the actual measured dose.
[emphasis is mine, not the article].
This underscores the importance of both implementing an effective
dosimetry program that accurately measures dose and maintaining dose
records in retrievable, legible form. If a plaintiff's dose was not
accurately measured or if the pertinent dose records are missing or
illegible, then plaintiff will be entitled to introduce his expert's
own dose reconstruction which will undoubtedly artificially inflate
the dose. Moreover if utilities are attempting to save money now by
eliminating or reducing the cost of badging employees whose doses are
expected to be below ten percent of the annual limits (10CFR20.1502)
and one of those workers sues, it is likely that the worker would be
allowed to introduce his own dose reconstruction since his dose was
not measured by the utility.
There is more, but hopefully this will whet the appetite of radsafers
to find and read the entire article. Besides watching the "psuedo
HPs" get their come-uppance and how the court decided this is great
reading.
Regards, and peace
Ron Goodwin
Ohio Department of Health
Bureau of Radiation Protection