2005
DOI: 10.1097/01.hp.0000175444.30788.75
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Hospital Management of Mass Radiological Casualties: Reassessing Exposures From Contaminated Victims of an Exploded Radiological Dispersal Device

Abstract: One of the key issues in the aftermath of an exploded radiological dispersal device from a terrorist event is that of the contaminated victim and the concern among healthcare providers for the harmful exposures they may receive in treating patients, especially if the patient has not been thoroughly decontaminated. This is critically important in the event of mass casualties from a nuclear or radiological incident because of the essential rapidity of acute medical decisions and that those who have life- or limb… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, attempts to alter the time between fractions to increase the efficacy of treating the cancer have shown promise, but there are no data on how this might affect healthy tissue tolerance, especially for the tissue outside the targeted treatment field (14). Additionally, radiation response profiles are also now of national strategic interest with the growing concern for potential population exposure to low levels of radiation via terrorist acts involving radiation dispersal devices (as reviewed in [15][16][17]. Thus, for both individual cancer patient counseling and public policy development, information on the temporal response to low-dose radiation exposure in human tissue is needed.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, attempts to alter the time between fractions to increase the efficacy of treating the cancer have shown promise, but there are no data on how this might affect healthy tissue tolerance, especially for the tissue outside the targeted treatment field (14). Additionally, radiation response profiles are also now of national strategic interest with the growing concern for potential population exposure to low levels of radiation via terrorist acts involving radiation dispersal devices (as reviewed in [15][16][17]. Thus, for both individual cancer patient counseling and public policy development, information on the temporal response to low-dose radiation exposure in human tissue is needed.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The general consensus in the radiological community appears to be that treatment of life-threatening injuries should always take precedence over measures to address radioactive contamination (Miller and Erdman 2004;IAEA 2005;NCRP 2005). A recent study suggests, however, that there may be rare situations where special precautions are necessary, even while managing life-threatening injuries of a contaminated victim (Smith et al 2005). The medical health physicist is in a unique position to assist the healthcare provider in evaluating the true extent and potential impact of any contamination present so that appropriate medical activities can take place in a timely manner consistent with the safety of hospital personnel.…”
Section: Receipt Of Victimsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Fission bomb dispersal of radioactive dust and dirty bomb effects (conventional explosive packaged with "subcritical mass quantities of Uranium 235, Plutonium 239, or other isotopes to produce radioactive clouds) are dependent upon particle size, elevation of the explosion, and prevailing wind patterns. Dispersal in either scenario leads to inhalation of radioactive materials by victims [12][13]. Management of pulmonary injury in both of these categories requires attention to ionizing irradiation effects on the lung.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%