Potential Radiation Exposure in Military Operations: Protecting the Soldier Before, During, and After

Portada
National Academies Press, 24 jun 1999 - 160 páginas

In 1996, NATO issued guidance for the exposure of military personnel to radiation doses different from occupational dose levels, but not high enough to cause acute health effects-and in doing so set policy in a new arena. Scientific and technological developments now permit small groups or individuals to use, or threaten to use, destructive devices (nuclear, biological, chemical, and cyber-based weaponry, among others) targeted anywhere in the world. Political developments, such as the loss of political balance once afforded by competing superpowers, have increased the focus on regional and subregional disputes. What doctrine should guide decisionmaking regarding the potential exposure of troops to radiation in this changed theater of military operations? In 1995, the Office of the U.S. Army Surgeon General asked the Medical Follow-up Agency of the Institute of Medicine to provide advice.

This report is the final product of the Committee on Battlefield Radiation Exposure Criteria convened for that purpose. In its 1997 interim report, Evaluation of Radiation Exposure Guidance for Military Operations, the committee addressed the technical aspects of the NATO directive. In this final report, the committee reiterates that discussion and places it in an ethical context.

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Radiation unit Conversion Chart ix
1
Introduction
15
Fundamentals of Radiation Safety and Protection
23
Standard Practices in Occupational Radiation Protec
42
Current Paradigms for Radiation Protection in the U S
55
Army Radiation Protection and Safety Programs in
64
Decisionmaking by Commanders
83
Recommendations
108
The ACE Directive
119
Participants in Committee Meetings and Workshop
129
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