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Procedures for medical response during a nuclear or radiological accident
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Basic data
| Standard ID | WS/T 467-2014 (WS/T467-2014) |
| Description (Translated English) | Procedures for medical response during a nuclear or radiological accident |
| Sector / Industry | Health Industry Standard (Recommended) |
| Classification of Chinese Standard | C57 |
| Classification of International Standard | 13.100 |
| Word Count Estimation | 52,589 |
| Date of Issue | 10/24/2014 |
| Date of Implementation | 4/1/2015 |
| Quoted Standard | GB 18871 |
| Regulation (derived from) | State-Health-Communication [2014] 13 |
| Issuing agency(ies) | National Health and Family Planning Commission of the People's Republic of China |
| Summary | This Standard specifies the nuclear accident and radiation accident scene, the hospital's medical emergency response basic content and procedures. This Standard applies to nuclear accidents and radiation accident scene, the medical emergency response work |
WS/T 467-2014: Procedures for medical response during a nuclear or radiological accident
---This is a DRAFT version for illustration, not a final translation. Full copy of true-PDF in English version (including equations, symbols, images, flow-chart, tables, and figures etc.) will be manually/carefully translated upon your order.
Procedures for medical response during a nuclear or radiological accident
ICS 13.100
C57
People's Republic of China health industry standards
Nuclear and radiation accident medical response procedures
2014-10-24 released
2015-04-01 implementation
People's Republic of China National Health and Family Planning Commission released
Directory
Foreword Ⅲ
1 Scope 1
2 Normative references 1
3 Terms and definitions 1
4 on-site medical emergency response 2
Medical Emergency Response in a Hospital 7
6 Health Emergency Response 21
Appendix A (Informative) Medical and nuclear emergency and nuclear accidents 24
Appendix B (Normative) Worksheet 27
Appendix C (informative) biological testing and service iodine protection 44
Reference 48
Foreword
According to "The People's Republic of China Incident Response Law" to develop this standard.
This standard was drafted in accordance with the rules given in GB/T 1.1-2009.
This standard was drafted. Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Medical.
The main drafters of this standard. Wang Zuo yuan, Liu Ying, Qin Bin, Yuan Long, Cui Hongxing, Ma Weidong, Chen Huifang, Lei Cuiping.
Nuclear and radiation accident medical response procedures
1 Scope
This standard specifies the nuclear accident and radiation accident scene, the hospital's medical emergency response basic content and procedures.
This standard applies to nuclear accident and radiation accident scene, the hospital's medical emergency response.
2 Normative references
The following documents for the application of this document is essential. For dated references, only the dated version applies to this article
Pieces. For undated references, the latest edition (including all amendments) applies to this document.
GB 18871 ionizing radiation protection and radiation source safety standards
3 Terms and definitions
The following terms and definitions apply to this document.
3.1
Nuclear accident nuclearaccident
In nuclear facilities, there are severly deviations from operating conditions; in this state, the release of radioactive material may or may have been lost
Due control, unacceptable level.
3.2
Radiation accident radiologicalaccident
The loss, theft, loss of control of a radioactive source, or the loss of control of radioisotopes and radiological equipment has resulted in unexpected abnormal exposure of personnel.
3.3
Preventive action area precautionaryactionzone; PAZ
A zone around nuclear facilities. In the region in advance to make emergency arrangements for nuclear accident action to reduce off-site serious determination
The risk of sexual effects. Normally, immediately before or after the occurrence of radioactive material leakage or exposure, depending on the prevailing facility conditions, mining
Take protective action.
3.4
Emergency protection action area
An area surrounding nuclear facilities where prior arrangements for emergency operations for nuclear accidents were made and protection was taken promptly in the event of an accident
action. The most urgent protective actions include evacuation, personal decontamination, concealment, respiratory protection, iodine protection and restriction of potentially contaminated food.
3.5
Decontamination decontamination
Decontamination
Removal of all or part of radioactive contamination through careful physical, chemical or biological processes, but excluding radioactivity in the body
Nuclide.
3.6
Bioassay
A method of detecting a radionuclide in a living body. By measuring and analyzing in vitro excretions directly or otherwise removed from the body
...