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Effect of a law amendment on dosimeter wearing in medical radiation workers: observational study

https://repo.qst.go.jp/records/2002854
https://repo.qst.go.jp/records/2002854
b925df60-0105-4307-a5eb-8578a823e586
アイテムタイプ 学術雑誌論文 / Journal Article(1)
公開日 2026-02-27
タイトル
タイトル Effect of a law amendment on dosimeter wearing in medical radiation workers: observational study
言語 en
言語
言語 eng
資源タイプ
資源タイプ識別子 http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501
資源タイプ journal article
著者 Matsuzaki Satoru

× Matsuzaki Satoru

Matsuzaki Satoru

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Moritake Takashi

× Moritake Takashi

Moritake Takashi

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Kitamura Hiroko

× Kitamura Hiroko

Kitamura Hiroko

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Kuriyama Tomoko

× Kuriyama Tomoko

Kuriyama Tomoko

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Morota Koichi

× Morota Koichi

Morota Koichi

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Nakagami Koichi

× Nakagami Koichi

Nakagami Koichi

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Hitomi Go

× Hitomi Go

Hitomi Go

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抄録
内容記述タイプ Abstract
内容記述 Objectives To evaluate the impact of a law amendment that reduced the eye lens dose limit on the use of personal dosimeters among radiation workers in medical settings.Materials and methods A repeated cross-sectional survey was conducted at medical institutions across three periods: before the law amendment (control) and during the promulgation and implementation periods. Surveyors (radiological technologists) at each participating medical institution recorded dosimeter-wearing status among radiation workers. Data were collected via mail or email and analysed. The observed workers included physicians, nurses, and radiological technologists.Results The surveys were collected from 1194 workers in the control period, 1374 in the promulgation period, and 1194 in the implementation period, totalling 3762 workers. Post-law amendment, the overall wearing rate of primary personal dosimeters signi cantly increased from 64.6% to 77.9% (p < 0.001). Signi cant increases in wearing rates were observed among physicians and radiological technologists (p < 0.001). Among occupations, physicians showed the lowest wearing rates across all periods (control: 35.8%, promulgation: 56.7%, implementation: 62.6%), whereas radiological technologists showed the highest (control: 92.7%, promulgation: 98.5%, implementation: 99.5%). Regarding physician specialities, orthopaedic surgery exhibited the lowest compliance (control: 11.3%, promulgation: 35.4%, implementation: 24.7%). The proportion of workers without provision of a personal dosimeter declined from 5.9% to 1.9% (p < 0.001).Conclusions Despite overall improvement following the law amendment, low compliance among physicians, particularly in orthopaedics, indicates the need for targeted interventions. Critical relevance statement Although dosimeter-wearing rates improved after Japan’s eye dose limit revision, persistent low physician compliance—especially in orthopaedics—highlights the need for targeted strategies to strengthen radiation protection in clinical practice.
書誌情報 Insights into Imaging

巻 17, 号 42, 発行日 2026-02
DOI
識別子タイプ DOI
関連識別子 10.1186/s13244-026-02218-3
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Ver.1 2026-03-05 05:27:13.874302
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