Radioactive patients set off subway alarms
12:55 05 December 02
newscientist.com news service
Americans undergoing radioactive medical treatments risk setting off anti-terrorism sensors in public places, and subsequent strip searches by police, warn doctors at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.
A 34-year-old patient who had been treated with radioactive iodine for Graves disease, a thyroid disorder, returned to their clinic three weeks later complaining he had been strip-searched twice in Manhattan subway stations. Christopher buettner and Martin surks report the case in a letter to the Journal of the American Medical Association.
"Police had identified him as emitting radiation and had detained him for further questioning. This patient's experience indicates that radiation detection devices are being installed in public places in New York City and elsewhere," the doctors write.
buettner and surks contacted the Terrorism Task Force of the New York City Police Department to determine how to prevent other patients being detained.
A letter describing the isotope used and its dose, its biological half-life and the date and time of treatment, plus a 24-hour contact telephone number for the patient's physician should help, the police said.
But even in the best-case scenario, a patient will have to wait while the contents of the letter are verified, say the doctors. "They may choose not to use public transportation to avoid this inconvenience," they write.
Emma Young
I like that last quote about "choosing" to not use public transportation to avoid the "inconvenience".
And on the lighter side....
From the Article "Oct 25, 2002 9:04 am US/Eastern
(AP) (WHITMAN, Mass. )
A man who ignored a veterinarian's order to flush his cat's radioactive waste down the toilet was hit with a $2,800 bill.
And Bill jenness said he's happy to pay it.
"I don't feel I was mistreated," jenness told The Patriot Ledger of quincy. "It's my cat, my responsibility and I did not abide by the directions I was given."
jenness' cat, mitzi, an 11-year-old shorthair, was treated with an injection of radioiodine after developing hyperthyroidism, which is common in cats her age.
The treatment makes the cat radioactive for weeks, so special care is required, including limiting snuggling time, keeping the cat away from children and pregnant women and using protective gloves when flushing the cat litter.
jenness said he decided to throw the litter in the trash after the waste hardened into abnormally large clumps.
"I was afraid of my septic system being clogged," he said.
mitzi's mess was discovered at an incinerator in Rochester when alarms detected radioactivity. Workers traced the waste to jenness after finding mail with his name on it nearby.
The radiation treatment by radiocat in waltham and cost of disposing the waste totaled about $5,000. jenness said it was worth it because mitzi is doing well.
radiocat's Web site says the amount of radiation from a radioiodine shot is probably less than the amount a person receives on a long plane flight or a day at the beach.
But Thomas burnett, a Whitman public works commissioner, said any radiation in trash is too much.
