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Types of Radiation Hazards
•Patients
who have only been exposed to the radiation from a radioactive source or
a machine, such as an x-ray machine or a linear accelerator, are not
contaminated and do not pose any radiation contamination or exposure
potential for hospital personnel.
•Radiation
safety precautions are not needed for patients who have only been
exposed and are not contaminated.
•Patients
with radioactive material on them or inside their bodies are said to be
contaminated.
•Contaminated
patients require care in handling to effectively remove and control the
contamination.
•Analogy
- You can think of radiation exposure and radioactive material in terms
of a trip to the beach. Sand is like radioactivity. The sun is like
radiation exposure. Once you go inside, you are not in the sun any
longer and there is no more exposure (radiation stops). On the other
hand, most of the sand came off when you walked off the beach, however,
some sand remains on your skin until you physically remove it (brush or
wash it off). The same is true for radioactivity contamination on the
skin. A small amount may remain on the skin and need to be washed off.
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