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Only responses from Radiologic Technologist please. As a Radiologic Technologist you are required to wear a lead apron from radiation exposure, but are you protected 100% from radiation exposure or are you still being exposed to a small percentage of radiation?

2007-12-02 19:09:02 · 3 answers · asked by girlygirl08 1 in Business & Finance Careers & Employment Health Care

3 answers

You are NEVER protected 100% from radiation exposure in that job.

It killed my uncle, if that gives you any idea of how much you can get exposed to.

2007-12-02 21:12:10 · answer #1 · answered by Expert8675309 7 · 0 2

Fear of radiation exposure is no reason to not become a radiologic technologist. It is VERY safe. We know how to protect ourselves. We get little if any more exposure than anybody else would just being outside or flying in an airplane.

"There is no risk of acute effects from exposure from diagnostic x-ray equipment. There are threshold doses for these effects, generally a few Gy, delivered at high dose rates. Diagnostic equipment will overheat and fail long before delivering doses in this range. There is a theoretical risk of cancer from small doses of radiation, such as might be encountered by radiographers/technologists in the operation of diagnostic equipment. A few old studies show statistically significant associations between occupational exposure and cancer in radiologists. The exposures occurred many years ago, when equipment was much cruder and occupational dose limits were nonexistent. No such associations have been identified from exposures since World War II. I am not aware of any such associations for radiographers from exposure at any time. The risk of cancer is minimal to nonexistent from occupational exposures below current dose limits. Current data show that virtually all radiology personnel can perform their duties while holding their occupational doses well below the limit. The best way to insure that this occurs is for all personnel to wear their personal dose monitors correctly."

Decades ago it wasn't safe like it is now. I've seen Mary B answer before, and I question her facts.

2007-12-03 01:50:48 · answer #2 · answered by RadTech - BAS RT(R)(ARRT) 7 · 2 0

i don't understand why human beings answer questions whilst they don't understand what the hell they're speaking approximately. As an x-ray tech, you're actually not in the room whilst the exposures are made. in the few circumstances once you're, you place on a lead apron. i'm getting as plenty radiation as all and sundry else. human beings do not understand which you're uncovered to radiation merely being exterior or taking a flight in an aircraft. My reproductive features are merely fantastic.

2016-10-10 03:21:57 · answer #3 · answered by michaelson 4 · 0 0

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