Evaluation of institutional whole-body and extremity occupational radiation doses in nuclear medicine

Radiat Prot Dosimetry. 2023 Nov 16;199(19):2318-2327. doi: 10.1093/rpd/ncad235.

Abstract

This study evaluated nuclear medicine occupational radiation doses at Sultan Qaboos University Hospital, a 700-bed tertiary care teaching hospital in Oman. Personal effective whole-body doses, Hp(10), and extremity doses, Hp(0.07), were collected for 19 medical radiation workers over a 7-year period (2015-2021). Personal doses for four professional groups were measured using calibrated thermo-luminescence dosemeters ((LiF:Mg,Ti) TLD-100). The average, median and maximum cumulative doses were compared against the annual whole-body and extremity dose limits (20 mSv and 500 mSv y-1, respectively) and local dose investigation level (DIL; 6 mSv y-1). Personal whole-body doses (average:median:maximum) for technologists, medical physicists, nuclear medicine physicians and nurses were 1.8:1.1:7.8, 0.3:0.3:0.4, 0.1:0.1:0.2 and 0.1:0.1:0.2 mSv, respectively. Personal extremity doses for left and right hand (average and maximum doses) follow similar trends. Average annual effective whole-body and extremity doses were well below the recommended annual dose limits. The findings suggest lowering local DIL for all staff except for technologists.

MeSH terms

  • Health Personnel
  • Humans
  • Nuclear Medicine*
  • Occupational Exposure* / analysis
  • Physicians*
  • Radiation Dosage
  • Radionuclide Imaging