1 / 44

Environment, Health & Safety

Environment, Health & Safety. Radiation Safety Seminar 2010. Robert Carrara David Skydel. 2010. Topics. Licensing/Administration User responsibilities Working with isotopes Other Important Information

Pat_Xavi
Télécharger la présentation

Environment, Health & Safety

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Environment, Health & Safety Radiation Safety Seminar 2010 Robert Carrara David Skydel 2010

  2. Topics • Licensing/Administration • User responsibilities • Working with isotopes • Other Important Information You will receive a Certificate of Completion for this seminar sent to the mail code you provided on your enrollment form.

  3. List 5 Key concepts you must take away from this seminar and will be held accountable for while you remain an active user listed on an RUA. 1: 2: 3: 4: 5:

  4. Licensing/Administration

  5. Radiation Safety Manual (RSM) • Keep this manual as an • electronic file. • http://blink.ucsd.edu/menu/rad • Book mark location on your computer. • You must be able to access this manual upon demand and it must be the current version. • Book marking assures you will always have the current version available. #1

  6. List 5 Key concepts you must take away from this seminar and will be held accountable for while you remain an active user listed on an RUA. 1: 2: 3: 4: 5: Know how to access your RSM

  7. General Information Human Protocols Demographic Information Standard Requirements Laboratory Locations Radiation Safety Officer Signature Menu of Isotopes #2 Authorized Users General Precautions Animal Protocols

  8. List 5 Key concepts you must take away from this seminar and will be held accountable for while you remain an active user listed on an RUA. 1: 2: 3: 4: 5: Know how to access your RSM Know where your RUA is located

  9. Principal Investigator (PI) Responsibilities • Overall responsibility • Ensure safety • Ensure compliance • Notify EH&S/Radiation Safety as necessary • PI is also listed as a “User” on the RUA and must adhere to all “User” responsibilities as well

  10. General User Responsibilities • Attend training • Wear protective clothing and gloves. • Use trays and absorbent paper. • Store liquids with secondary containment. • Label containers, storage and use areas. • Do not pipette by mouth. • Do not eat, drink, smoke, store food or apply cosmetics in laboratories • 8) Use shielding and remote handling tools when necessary. • 9) Wear assigned dosimetry when necessary. • 10) Always follow lab procedures and the RSM. (Radiation Safety Manual) • 11) Continuously survey work areas, hands, and clothing. • 12) Immediately clean-up/report spills.

  11. Four Primary Types of Ionizing Radiation Radioactivity is the natural property of certain nuclides to spontaneously emit energy in the form of ionizing radiation in an attempt to become more stable. Alpha – Large mass, rather high energy Beta – Small mass, energy varies Gamma (X-ray) – no mass, energy varies nNeutron – mass≈ proton, energy varies

  12. The Language of Radiation – Radiation Units Millirem (mrem) Millicurie (mCi) Counts per minute (cpm) Microcurie (uCi)

  13. ALARA – As Low As Reasonably Achievable External dose • Time • Distance • Shielding • Plastic • Lead • Dry runs • Internal dose • Inhalation • Ingestion • Absorption • Injection

  14. Women of Childbearing Age • Contact: Priya Rayadurgam x 2-2494 • Is confidential • Declaration of Pregnancy Form • More Information – Regulatory Guide 8.13

  15. Posting/Labeling Post All Radioactive Materials Use Areas. Label refrigerators and Freezers. Label containers, tubes, racks, pipettes, anything coming in contact with radioactive material. Clean Areas

  16. Audits/Renewals Intended to assist • Frequency of audits High use lab twice a year Low use lab once per year • Renewal – Annually – includes required radiation safety refresher training.

  17. Ordering/Receipt Use lab protocol for purchase orders Radioactive material will be delivered to your location • EH&S Services Lab – Closed weekends and holidays (Formally known as the Isotope Lab) • UCtr 301B • Call 4-6418 or 4-0902 You may pick up or Services Lab will deliver.

  18. EH&S Services Lab

  19. Isotope Inventory Card Each stock vial of radioactive material received will have an inventory number and barcode assigned to it. The user should keep a record in mCi’s of aliquots taken from the stock vial. #3

  20. List 5 Key concepts you must take away from this seminar and will be held accountable for while you remain an active user listed on an RUA. 1: 2: 3: 4: 5: Know how to access your RSM Know where your RUA is located Complete Isotope Inventory Card

  21. Inventory Control • Report in units of mCi • Quarterly updates Mailed 1st week of months: January, April, July, and October Must sign and return even if you have no inventory • Mail Code: 0035, FAX: 858-822-8824 • Sealed sources • Leak testing-Rad Safety will perform every 6 months

  22. Decay calculated by Services Lab Last reported amount by lab All Users listed on the RUA must know where all Radioactive Inventory is at all times. Security and Control is the Goal. #4

  23. List 5 Key concepts you must take away from this seminar and will be held accountable for while you remain an active user listed on an RUA. 1: 2: 3: 4: 5: Know how to access your RSM Know where your RUA is located Complete Isotope Inventory Card Know where your inventory is at all times

  24. Surveys • Wipes- Required in labs that have H-3 in inventory and/or area with high background • Survey Meter Check meter for proper functioning Use appropriate probe • Frequency for documented surveys High use = Weekly Low use = Monthly >10mCi/exp = Daily (or after each use) The more you survey the less chance contamination will be missed. Scintillation Probe Pancake Probe

  25. How to Use a Survey Meter You must use the meter correctly to obtain an accurate measurement. Need to know the Characteristics of the Isotope you are measuring in order to choose the correct instrument to do your survey. The instrument has limitations P-32 = 15%, S-35 = 5%, I-125 = 10%

  26. Radioactive Materials/Waste cannot go down the drain or in the trash Radioactive Waste • Store behind appropriate shielding • Collect in appropriate containers • Collect rinses from contaminated lab-ware • Labeling • At start of accumulation label with: • “Isotope” & “Caution – radioactive materials” • International Trefoil “symbol” • RAD waste tag must be complete at time of pick up Keep outside surface of waste containers free of contamination Keep waste areas clear of debris Avoid accumulating large amounts of radioactive waste on site

  27. Radioactive Waste Tag Waste Generator Bar Code Label Lab Contact Name/Phone Building/Room Isotope and Activity in mCi Description of other constituents (Chem. Bio.) List method of disinfection if applicable. Deactivated with 10% bleach

  28. Radioactive Waste Do’s and Don’ts • Isotope – Separate waste stream for each: S-35, P-32, I-125, P-33, H-3/C14 • Liquid – Solids out of the liquid waste, (Carboy) Secondary containment • Solids – Liquids out of the solid waste • Gels - Double bag using clear plastic bags. • Sharps - Puncture proof container • Stock Vials - Double bag • Animals - Wrap in bench-cote, double bag, store in freezer • LSC Vials – Cardboard crate or double bag • No Radioactive trash in regular trashcans. • No Radioactive liquid waste down the drain. • Minimizenon-radioactive materials in radioactive trash. • Only authorized users on RUA can prepare waste for pick-up.

  29. How can I get waste picked up? • Get pickup request form at: • http://www.blink.ehs.ucsd.edu/hazwaste/forms/pickup.htm • Fax (534-9708), mail (mc 0958), or email to: (hazewaste@ucsd.edu) • Pickup times: • Main campus – Tues. & Thurs. • SIO & Medical Center – Wed. • Requests in by 7:00 AM generally same day

  30. Radioactive Waste • Large Scale Decay program • Segregation by isotope • Safety & Cost efficiency

  31. Safety Video I

  32. Emergencies • Flip Chart – UCSD Emergency Response Guide Main Campus/SIO: • 4-HELP (4-4357) 858-534-4357 • EH&S Office: 858-534-3660 UCSD Medical Center Hillcrest: • 6111 (EH&S: Office 619-543-7575) • Preplanning – supplies on-hand • Prevention – training, dry runs • If you hear an alarm VACATE the building!

  33. Safety Video II

  34. Spills #5 • Stop Moving – Call for HELP and a Survey Meter • Warn others – To stay out of area • Isolate the area – Isolate the spill – Locate using SM • Minimize exposure – Decontaminate Clean spill immediately. If require assistance call 534-HELP (534-4357)

  35. List 5 Key concepts you must take away from this seminar and will be held accountable for while you remain an active user listed on an RUA. 1: 2: 3: 4: 5: Know how to access your RSM Know where your RUA is located Complete Isotope Inventory Card Know where your inventory is at all times First thing to do if you spill – STOP Moving

  36. Spills continued… • Decontaminate personnel first! • Contaminated clothing should be removed. Use warm water, be gentle, do not break skin, no scrub brush, do consult with EH&S Radiation Safety • Using two people to clean up a spill is preferable. • Spill needs to be documented according to UCSD requirements.

  37. Whole Body Ring Dosimetry <1 mCi/exp. Any Isotope Do Not Need 1 mCi/exp. medium/high energy beta or gamma emitter Will use quarterly dosimetry 10 mCi/exp, Will use monthly ring Most researchers will not require any type of monitoring.

  38. Annual Dose Limits • 5,000 mrem (whole body) • 15,000 mrem (lens of the eye) • 50,000 mrem (skin or extremities) • minors - 10% of adult limits • embryo/fetus - 500 mrem (over gestation period) • Typical whole body dose for a researcher at UCSD is 0.00 mrem/year • Typical background exposure in San Diego is approximately 160mrem/yr

  39. Transfer/Shipping • Forms are required. • http://blink.ucsd.edu/menu/rad You are transferring the security and control obligations from UCSD to the recipient.

  40. Forms • Radioisotope User Enrollment* • All forms are on the web • http://blink.ucsd.edu/menu/rad  *Researchers Using Unsealed Radioisotopes

  41. Other Training (May be Required) • Iodination – Iodine Safety Seminar • P-32 > 10 mCi/Exp – P-32 Safety Seminar • S-35 > 10 mCi/Exp – S-35 Safety Seminar Arranged as needed with your Health Physicist. Radiation Producing Machines - Radiation Machine Safety Seminar New State Mandated Training Coming soon Stand By for more details

  42. Contact EH&S • Releasing equipment • Moving laboratories • Maintenance on equipment • Call 4-3660

  43. Questions • David Skydel – dskydel@ucsd.edu, x2-5526 • Robert Carrara – rcarrara@ucsd.edu, x2-2878 • EH&S Main Desk - 534-3660 • RSO (Radiation Safety Officer) Corey Singleton • csingleton@ucsd.edu, x2-4045 • Contact your HP/RAP directly

More Related