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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Practical recommendations for the application of DE 59/2013

Luisa PierottiDomenico LizioMichele StasiSergio SalernoStephen EvansAlberto Torresin

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyPopulationRadiation Dosage030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciencesDose limit0302 clinical medicineOccupational ExposureLens CrystallinemedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingMedical physicsEuropean UnionEye lenseducationBSSEuropean Directive EuratomRadiodiagnostic and radiotherapeutic proceduresMedical exposureRadiation protectioneducation.field_of_studymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMember statesInterventional radiologyGeneral MedicineRadiation ExposureReference StandardsDirective030220 oncology & carcinogenesisRadiological weaponAccidentalAsymptomatic DiseasesEmergenciesSafetyRadiologybusinessHealth Physics

description

The changes introduced with Council Directive 2013/59/Euratom will require European Member States adapt their regulations, procedures and equipment to the new high standards of radiation safety. These new requirements will have an impact, in particular, on the radiology community (including medical physics experts) and on industry. Relevant changes include new definitions, a new dose limit for the eye lens, non-medical imaging exposures, procedures in asymptomatic individuals, the use and regular review of diagnostic reference levels (including interventional procedures), dosimetric information in imaging systems and its transfer to the examination report, new requirements on responsibilities, the registry and analysis of accidental or unintended exposure and population dose evaluation (based on age and gender distribution). Furthermore, the Directive emphasises the need for justification of medical exposure (including asymptomatic individuals), introduces requirements concerning patient information and strengthens those for recording and reporting doses from radiological procedures, the use of diagnostic reference levels, the availability of dose-indicating devices and the improved role and support of the medical physics experts in imaging.

https://doi.org/10.1007/s11547-019-01031-x