selected hospitals will have 2 of these monitors, one for ambulatory entrance and one for ambulance entrance to the ED
designed to alarm upon the entry of a hazardous radioactive source into the ED, eg. as shrapnel embedded in a patient
will not usually detect radioactive contamination on pts entering ED unless they stand for more than 2 secs near the probe.
only detects gamma radiation with measurement range of 1microSv/hr to 5mSv/hr
wall mountable with separate detector probe with cable >3m that can also be used to scan patients
AC powered with rechargeable battery backup
audible alarm 90dba at 30cm (can turn volume down by rotating plastic wheel over the speaker to muffle it)
visible red flashing light alarm
alarm able to be set to any point on measurement scale
what do do if alarm goes off:
ask patient who set alarm off if have been to nuclear med (eg. for bone scan, V/Q scan) recently, if so, just turn alarm off and ignore
if unable to determine who set alarm off, can use the probe to scan each person - ensure probe does not touch anything to avoid it being contaminated (can use a glove over it if contamination is a possibility)
if person sets alarm off and has not had a nuclear med exam recently or reasonable explanation for the radiation, then contact senior staff to consider activating the radiation emergency response as above.
NB. the NUM has an operation manual for this device.