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Chemotherapy Patients Set Off Subway Alarms 538

dave writes "Recently, cities such as New York and elsewhere have been installing radiation detectors in subways as an anti-terror precaution. However, as reported in New Scientist, patients who are undergoing radiation treatment are setting off the alarms. From the article, "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.""
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Chemotherapy Patients Set Off Subway Alarms

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  • Irradiated pedestrians! Seriously though, I never thought they'd get enough radiation shot into them to set off detectors, unless the threshold is way to low.
  • huh? (Score:5, Informative)

    by gralem ( 45862 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:09AM (#4830846)
    Chemotherapy is not radiation therapy!
    • by cyber_rigger ( 527103 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:25AM (#4830916) Homepage Journal
      I know that some radioactive iodine isotopes are used for thyroid treatment as a marker or for destruction of cancerous thyroid tissue. Thyroid tissue absorbs iodine and certain iodine isotopes.
    • Re:huh? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Idarubicin ( 579475 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:07AM (#4831097) Journal
      Chemotherapy is not radiation therapy!

      In this case, it is.

      Graves disease is a form of hyperthyroidism, in which the thyroid secretes excessive amounts of certain hormones. The treatment of Graves disease involves removal of part or all of the thyroid, chemical supression of hormone production, or destruction of the thyroid using radiation.

      In the latter treatment, doctors take advantage of the fact that iodine is concentrated by the body in the thyroid gland. After dosing a patient with radioactive iodine-131 (in this case, 20 millicuries--a nontrivial amount) the iodine will accumulate rapidly in the thyroid. While it decays, it kills off most or all thyroid tissue without doing serious damage to the rest of the body. With a half-life of about eight days, the stuff remains detectable for quite a while.

      So--what we've done is use the chemical properties of a material (I-131) to deliver radiation therapy. Presto! Chemotherapy that is also radiotherapy. Actually, I'd probably lean towards describing it as brachytherapy, just to make everyone happy.

      • Re:huh? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Imabug ( 2259 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @08:37AM (#4832039) Homepage Journal
        radioiodine therapy is not chemotherapy, nor is it brachytherapy. chemotherapy is the use of cytotoxic chemicals (none of which are radioactive) to kill cancer cells at a faster rate than normal cells. Brachytherapy is the implantation of radioactive sources into a tumour to kill them.

        Radioiodine therapy is a form of radioisotope therapy.

        there is also radioimmunotherapy, which uses monoclonal antibodies usually labelled with a beta emitter to deliver targeted radiation to a specific antigen expressing tumour.
        • Re:huh? (Score:3, Informative)

          by Idarubicin ( 579475 )
          chemotherapy is the use of cytotoxic chemicals...

          You're using the most popular--but also narrowest--definition of chemo. Pull out your Merriam-Webster (online at www.m-w.com) and the first definition is a literal interpretation of the term:

          chemotherapy: n. The use of chemical agents in the treatment or control of disease or mental illness

          Brachytherapy is the implantation of radioactive sources into a tumour to kill them.

          Brachytherapy is a blanket term is radiotherapy that covers a range of techniques to place radioactive sources in close proximity to a target volume within the body. It may include the use of sealed seeds (iodine-131 sealed in a casing is often used for prostate cancer) than can be permanently implanted. It also includes high dose rate therapies where wires within catheters or needles tipped with potent radioactive sources (ie iridium-192), are inserted into the body for a few minutes at a time, again to precisely deliver radiation to a controlled volume. The other broad branch of radiotherapy is teletherapy--external beam radiotherapy--which obviously doesn't apply in this case.

  • My question is... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dagg ( 153577 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:16AM (#4830873) Journal
    How much radiation does it take to make those things go off? Those patients must be emitting the tiniest amount of radiation. There is no way that that amount of radiation is actually hurting any nearby people. But the detectors are going off even though noone could be directly effected.

    My guess is that the detectors are set to "go off" even if the tiniest amount of radiation is found. That way, any attempt by terrorists to try to hide the radiation (thick lead, etc) will be thwarted.

    --
    Just look at your waist [tilegarden.com]
    • by hazzzard ( 530181 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:24AM (#4830910)
      ... any attempt by terrorists to try to hide the radiation (thick lead, etc) ... Well, could you also just require these patients to wear something like that (thick lead jacket and pants, plus a lead face mask and hat) so that these tiny amounts of radiation will then not be detected any more??! I am sure the paranoid US agencies would like such a solution better than making the detectors less sensitive...
    • No, it won't. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Guppy06 ( 410832 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:53AM (#4831035)
      "My guess is that the detectors are set to "go off" even if the tiniest amount of radiation is found. That way, any attempt by terrorists to try to hide the radiation (thick lead, etc) will be thwarted."

      If anything, all those false positives will make it easier to sneak in a nuclear or radiological device. When the alarms are going off every day you tend not to be as attentive as you would be otherwise, and the personnel involved won't exactly give a thorough search.

      How did 12/7/41 and 9/11/01 happen? Too much information gathering, not enough information interpretation. And from the looks of this, we're setting ourselves up for more of the same.
      • by lommer ( 566164 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @02:58AM (#4831447)
        Honestly, all this will do is cause an unholy incovenience to cancer patients such that it gets into the media, at which point any self respecting terrorist who can do a bit of research will figure out that he should just avoid the subways.

        Duh.
    • by toxic666 ( 529648 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:49AM (#4831238)
      Depends upon the type of radiation source and the detector in use. Alpha, beta and gamma radiation are different animals and emitted by radioisotopes in different amounts.

      Alpha particles are helium nucleii without electrons; beta particles are electrons; gamma radiation is electromagnetic radiation similar to X-Rays. Alpha and beta radiation are mostly stopped by inches to feet of air; gamma is more or less unaffected. Harmful doses are more complicated to assess, but basically, alpha and beta emitters are typically harmful when they get into your body and emit particles right next to cells, where they cause ionizing damage. Inserting alpha and beta emitters within a tumor is, essentially, what one form of radiotherapy does; put deadly ionizing radiation into a tumor to kill it. Radium has been an effective treatment for breast cancer (one of the first reasonably successful ones) since the 1920's.

      Gamma radiation, although it passes through many feet of air and well into tissue, is not as damaging because it is not ionizing. However, high exposures have significant impacts. Gamma will pass through metals more or less unaffected.

      The detectors are likely designed to pick up gamma radiation characteristic of enriched fissionable materials, because gamma passes through several feet of air. However, certain types of radiotheraputic isotopes (e.g. radium) also emit a heck of a lot of gamma.

      Thus, the dilema of false positives for radiotherapy patients. If you want to pick up enriched radioisotopes, you will pick up gamma from legitimate theraputic uses. We should provide radiotherapy patients with a hospital-issued ID so they do not have to suffer through security checks. It would not be much more difficult than issuing a driver's license.
      • by The Tyro ( 247333 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @03:22AM (#4831505)
        You are more right than you know.

        Even though some of the chemotheraputic agents we use these days are related to chemical warfare agents, it's the dose that makes or breaks you.

        Virtually all chemo agents have one thing in common... they are some kind of metabolic poison. They are nucleoside analogues, directly denature DNA or proteins... whatever. Because of this, they are quite useful in cancer treatments, primarily because cancer cells divide at an abnormally fast rate, and are very metabolically active... ergo, these drugs will affect such cells to a great extent than normal tissues. Keep in mind, however, that some of your normal tissues are also rapidly dividing: bone marrow, hair follicles, intestinal lining. Ever wonder why cancer patients lose their hair and need blood transfusions? That's why, in a nutshell.

        Don't let anyone tell you that chemo is bad/evil... that's bullshit. Unpleasant? Yes. Evil/bad/drug-company-conspiracy? No. Because of chemo, we have very high cure rates on some kinds of cancer... testicular cancer is a good example; very treatable with chemotherapy. But, like anything else, it doesn't work on every cancer, or every person... that's the other edge of the biological diversity sword.

        Also, there are some chemo drugs that have a lifetime maximum dose... you get amount X and NO MORE... ever.

        The dose really does make the poison, and that's not theory... that's real world.
        • That's interesting.. but what does chemotherapy have to do with radiation treatment?

          And for the grandparent post... if you really think gamma radiation is not ionizing, and want to go telling the world that, go hang out with some gamma emitters for a while first, THEN come tell us how it passes harmlessly through things.

          Alpha & Beta radiation, outside the body, cause radiation damage primarily in the skin. The higher the energy, the further they penetrate, of course. Gamma radiation, however, will pass right through you, causing damage to your internal organs along the way.

          What is ionizing radiation? [ohio-state.edu]

          Gamma radiation is VERY ionizing. Why do you think it causes cancer? Why do you think it casues radiation poisoning in high doses? What do you think radiation poisoning is?

      • We should provide radiotherapy patients with a hospital-issued ID so they do not have to suffer through security checks. It would not be much more difficult than issuing a driver's license.

        It's funny that you should bring this up. I was just at the state legislature on Wednesday watching the discussion on the concealed weapon system, and I gave testimony saying that the permit should not be a photogrph based permit, and should instead be non-photo based, because it would be very likely that the photo based permit would be counterfeited for reasons other than carrying a concealed weapon, and would add a new front in ID theft.

        Though this isn't so much the same reason, making up new reasons for photo ID's is a very bad idea...I've always said myself that photograph based drivers' licenses haven't solved the problems that they themselves caused when they appeared on the scene. More photo ID's cards are not a solution to anything except how to create spiffier forms of identity fraud.

        Issuing driver's licenses are incidentally a pain in the ass, especially in New York, which no longer accepts a birth certificate as proof of identity (see the NY DMV website for more info. It's kinna interesting.) Funny, New York never made the photograph mandatory on their licenses--no point, since many of the states residents will never have had licenses in the first place, so the photo ID advantages were lost. (The NY DMV commmissioner has had, since 1994, the ability to issue licenses with photos at his discretion, but is not required to.)

        And naturally, I am extremely bothered by the idea that someone has to be given a photo ID card because something about them is different. That's the whole situation here...type A citizens don't need photo ID card, type B citizens who radiate gamma level radiation, for reasons that aren't entirely our business, need photo ID card explaining that. That can't be good precedence.

        While I hate making the comparison, the Nazi's did have a fucking photo ID card for just about everything...I think they had some sorta odd philosophy that the more photo ID cards a person had, the more difficult they were to fake an identity. Fortunately, underground counterfeiters sent many people to freedom by faking all those documents that the Nazi's made. Frankly, all it achieved was a lot of inconvenience for everyone.
  • My uncle... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by silvaran ( 214334 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:17AM (#4830876)
    ...got nailed twice. He was driving around the U.S. late at night, heading back into Canada, and a patrol unit pulled him over, threw everything out of the back of his trunk, then interrogated him for a little while. He drank some kind of radioactive fluid to treat his cancer after his surgery, and it had set off an alarm in the patrol car.

    Same thing happened once he got to the border. The border guard let him go, then some guy came running out of the customs building screaming at the top of his lungs. They stopped him and he had to read them the same story all over again. This drug is so powerful he can only take it once every six months.
    • by PissingInTheWind ( 573929 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:24AM (#4830911)
      /me set the BS flag up.

      Radioactive stuff is mostly used to follow something you ingest, or an injection.

      I really can't see the use of a powerful, radioactive drug taken every 6 months.

      Though I might be wrong, I have serious doubt.
    • Re:My uncle... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by BernManUNC ( 455335 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @02:02AM (#4831273)
      Another good story:

      My father is a physician, and I used to hang out in the radiology dep. while he did rounds. One of the techs told me about how they had given a patient an injection of a radioactive isotope for a radioacive imaging of his heart (I can't remember the exact name of this technique). Three weeks later, he walks into the White House on a tour, sets off the alarms, and is pulled out of the crowd and questioned by the Secret Service. This isotope had a half-life of eight hours. Now, I understand the chemomtherapy dose setting off alarms, as that has to have some punch. But eight hours for something that just has to be detected with an insturment three feet away? You do that math, that's some senstive equipment they have in the White House.
      • You do that math, that's some senstive equipment they have in the White House.

        It can't be that sensitive. Suppose they put about 20 millimoles in him (that's a lot, especially just for imaging). About 10^22 atoms (Avogadro, remember him?). After 3*7*3=63 halflives there about 2^63 /=/ 10^19 times fewer, about say a thousand (this is rounded to the nearest power of 10). If he's near the detector for about say 1 minute, that's about a 500th of a halflife so we can expect, what, one of the atoms to decay? Even if the gamma hits the detector (probably another 10,000 to 1 against), it's below the noise threshold, and they certainly can't pick him out of the crowd. Maybe if it were two weeks, or there were a less common isotope with a longer half-life mixed in, I could believe it.
  • Radiation levels (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Simon Field ( 563434 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:17AM (#4830878) Homepage


    Normally thyroid cancer patients are told to stay some distance from family members when they return home. After a few days the levels are lower and such precautions aren't necessary.

    I don't know if the levels are lower for Grave's disease, or if this person should not have been on crowded subways. But to detect the levels in a shielded device, you would probably want the sensors to be pretty sensitive. Sensitivity also helps to allow fewer detectors to be used.

    Should a strip-search be necessary? I doubt it.
    Just hold the detector close to the thyroid to verify the guy's story. Maybe hospitals could give out cards, and the security folks could phone the hospital for confirmation.

    Or just call a cab for the poor guy.

    • by JollyGoodChase ( 562568 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:22AM (#4830900) Homepage
      If the guy's not carrying anything like a briefcase, where do they think he's hiding a 'dirty' bomb? Do the authorities think it's possible to carry a bomb on your person? So they think the tech is available to make the device that small? A strip search does seem a little over the top.
      • by Garion911 ( 10618 )
        This coming from someone who's never been through a NY winter. Thick coats winter coats man...

        (Just to clarify, I'm from "upstate" (really central NY) )...

      • by DAldredge ( 2353 ) <SlashdotEmail@GMail.Com> on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:05AM (#4831092) Journal
        What! You really think they thought about this? No. They just put them in to make themselves and the public at large feel 'safer'.

        NOTE: The 2 minute delay between posting sucks.
      • by Idarubicin ( 579475 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:12AM (#4831128) Journal
        If you're just interested in terror, you could carry a bottle of some powdered radioisotope. They're not really that hard to come by. Sprinkle it on the subway. Random subway cars, station benches, wherever.

        Soon as the news hits that the New York subway system is contaminated with radioactive material, there will be panic, regardless of amount. And it wouldn't take a very big container of material to do it, either.

        Tremendous amounts of fear; no bomb required. Remember when there was anthrax in the mail? You can scare a lot of people without any explosions.

        • "Soon as the news hits that the New York subway system is contaminated with radioactive material, there will be panic, regardless of amount."

          Now, maybe they've changed things, but the last time I was in New York, the Subways were open. IE: you could freely pour particulate matter into air vents and other areas that honeycomb the streets under Manhattan. It's nice in winter to get the warm breeze of a passing Subway train, but it also means it's very easy to contaminate. There's no reason a terrorist would go through the gateway, when there are so many other entry methods they can use.

          Reactionist, rather than rational, security measures are not secure.
    • Re:Radiation levels (Score:2, Interesting)

      by shepd ( 155729 )
      >Just hold the detector close to the thyroid to verify the guy's story.

      Dumb question: How long does it take to die without a thyroid? How big is a thyroid anyways... I'm willing to guess you could fit a few ounces of radioactive material there.

      Remember, Taliban members would be more than willing to die if it means they could bring in some of that stuff.

      Not that I think all this is a particularly good idea anyways, but hey, if that's what they're all worried about...
      • Remember, Taliban members would be more than willing to die

        Maybe you mean al Qaeda. The Taliban was just another batch of thuggish warriors in Afghanistan. Yet somehow you fear them attacking you here, halfway around the world.

    • by The Tyro ( 247333 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:26AM (#4831181)
      IANARO (Radiation Oncologist), but have some knowledge of this subject.

      Usually Iodine-131 is given as ablation therapy for hyperthyroidism... the thyroid gland takes up the radioactive iodine (just like it takes up regular iodine) and literally burns itself out. The damage is localized because I-131 is a beta emitter. You can get the gland surgically removed as an alternative, but most people go for the pill... it's just easier. There may be specific indications for surgical removal (discrete mass, need pathology input, etc), but I could not name them.

      There are other radioactive treatments for cancers... radioactive "seed" implants in prostate cancer for instance. I have never seen anyone walking around in public with them, but scanning someone being treated in that fashion might be interesting (to say the least). If airline security goons are making new mothers drink their own breastmilk (yes, I said "goons," there's no other name for someone who would do something that stupid) I can see some overzealous security folks doing a body cavity search to find the source of that "rectal radiation." I shudder at the thought of the lawsuit amount after something like that.

      People undergoing chemotherapy will not set off any radiation alarms. However, from a theoretical standpoint, I can see the possibility of them setting off chemical warfare agent detectors. Please note the detectors would have to be outrageously sensitive (I don't know if it's even possible to make them that sensitive)... almost all of the chemotheraputic agents in common use are metabolic poisons of one type or another, including drugs like the nitrogen mustards (related to mustard gas). I could see someone getting some chemo solution spilled on their sleeve, and setting of somebody's chemical warfare sniffer. Someone with a little more chemical warfare experience want to comment?
  • by fava ( 513118 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:17AM (#4830879)
    A friend of mine had a summer job at Triumpf [triumf.ca] a number of years ago. Triumf is a particle and nuclear physics lab. One day he took the morning off to get some medical tests done where they injected him full of tracer isotopes. We he tried to go back to work in the afternoon he set off half the radiation alarms in the place just by walking through the front door.

    They gave him the rest of the day off.
  • I wonder... (Score:2, Insightful)

    Would you need to a chemo-card to prove that you really had cancer and had to have the treatment? I hope and pray folk are not harassed, as that is very last thing that they need in their lives (very personal experience talking there).

    On a rather serious note, it is interesting to see that someone even had the thought that someone carrying a dirty bomb strapped to them would "pose" (and I use the word here literally, so do not flame me here) as a cancer patient. Perfect way to disguise it, very clever. And to think that security noticed it at least commendable.
  • how about... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by garcia ( 6573 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:18AM (#4830885)
    I have been searched at the airport EVERY single time I have flown.

    I was just searched for explosives, stopped in the next line, questioned as to why I had prescription blood pressure medicine, and why I had a car stereo in my bag.

    I don't know if it is the beard or what, but I should not be picked for the random searches over 80% of the times I board a plane.
    • Keep track of your flights to searches. Now that all airport security is done by the feds, you could file a racial profile suit and win rather easily if your numbers are right.

      Keep some good logs over the next year, and you would have a VERY interesting case. Oh, and make the person searching you sign the ticket page you log it on in journal and on your ticket stub.
      (thu preeveeus ehnttree wus not spehl ckekd)
      "NEVER bluff with super-weapons!" Dr. Evil
      • I'm a white male, mid-twenties, w/a beard.

        I wouldn't exactly call it racial profiling...
        • Call it what you will, it is still profiling.

          You have a beard, you have glasses, you fit the profile of what someone has said to look for. That fits under the the Supream Courts ruling for racial profiling.

          Besides, half of the middle east can look white easily, and I can look like I am from there after twoo weeks in Florida.
        • I'm a white male, mid-twenties, w/a beard.

          I wouldn't exactly call it racial profiling...

          I believe that's known as "John Walker Syndrome".

          Might want to consider a shave, or a geographic location change.

        • Re:how about... (Score:3, Interesting)

          Could your political views be considered progressive or radical leftist? Are you an activist? There is at least anecdotal evidence [alternet.org] that political activists who tend toward the left and libertarian side of the spectrum are on a search list aside from the 1000-person no-fly list.
          • Re:how about... (Score:4, Insightful)

            by perfessor multigeek ( 592291 ) <pmultigeek@@@earthlink...com> on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:09AM (#4831110) Homepage Journal
            Thank you for the link.
            The idea that the Transportation Safety folks now keep a list of people to subject to intense search bothers me not at all.
            The idea that one can get on that list simply for being politically distasteful to the Bush Administration is appalling.
            The idea that nobody is willing to admit how this list is compiled or how one disputes being on it is terrifying.
            When government declares that it is no longer accountable to the people it governs, then it has lost the legitimacy of that office.
            I would compare this to McCarthy but McCarthy and his cronies weren't anywhere near this effective.
            Rustin
        • #4830920) I'm a white male, mid-twenties, w/a beard.

          I wouldn't exactly call it racial profiling...

          But the security guys are black, no???
    • I should play the lottery, considering how often I get picked for "random" searches... 100% so far.
    • Re:how about... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Galvatron ( 115029 )
      First of all, given the number of people flying, yes, of course some people are going to end up as statistical anomolies. Also, people have a tendancy to remember annoying events. Try actually writing down each time you get searched when boarding the plane, and see if it is actually 80%. Finally, if it bothers you, try waiting until the plane is about to close the doors before boarding. It's just as confortable to wait in the airport as on the plane, and they don't delay departures to search the last few people who board.
    • no.

      All round trip. All booked well in advance. Beard is neatly trimmed, hair is short and combed, prescription medicine is in my name, car stereo should have been questioned at the security entrance after going through the X-ray (not at the gate), I wear clean clothes, and nothing to suggest that I am a member of any small minority faction...

      These trips were from SMALL airports to SMALL airports. Connecting flights were at large airports but generally at the large airports is where the 20% of skipping came in.

      Toledo -> Pittsburgh -> Scranton
      Minneapolis -> Philadelphia -> Scranton
      Dayton -> Charolette -> Savannah
  • by Cerlyn ( 202990 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:21AM (#4830895)
    The New York Times has a much more detailed article [nytimes.com] on this subject. Registration required, etc., etc., etc.

    Of particular note is that the NYT was *not* able to verify that anyone said they carrying a note from a doctor would be useful; rather, it said the police would not accept such a letter as "sole proof" that the person was not trying to pull a fast one on them, and would still conduct a full investigation.

    • The White House, too (Score:3, Informative)

      by MacAndrew ( 463832 )
      I think it was the NYT that reported recently a guy who was entering the White House after a medical procedure and heart a faint electronic noise go off. He was instantly surrounded by the Secret Service which, given their limited sense of humor, is a pretty frightening thing. (I am proud that years ago I got one of them to smile. :)

      I don't think he was strip-searched (he didn't work there but was a VIP of some sort).
  • by webword ( 82711 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:23AM (#4830907) Homepage
    This doesn't surpise me at all. On National Public Radio today (All Things Considered [npr.org]) a researcher was talking about the best research tool for tracking down weapons of mass destruction: a 4" x 4" cotton swab. They run the swab over almost any surface and can detect radioactive material to the level of 1 part per billion. Geeez.
    --
    Trade it on Trodo!
    http://trodo.com [trodo.com]
    • Clarification: The detection is down to the level of one billionth of a gram, not one part per billion.

      --
      Trade it on Trodo!
      http://trodo.com
    • Wouldn't naturally occuring radioactive elements cause problems with that a little? Or do they have the ability to sort out the different forms and identify only those that are not naturally occuring?
      • Excellent question. I had the same thought. The NPR piece actually touched on this topic in a few ways. For example, some guy could walk around in an area that is contaminated and then walk into another area "polluting" the new area that was not previously contaminated. And, as you mention, I wonder about the natually occuring sources. Detection should not necessarily determine causation.
      • ...do they have the ability to sort out the different forms and identify only those that are not naturally occuring?

        The short answer is, yes!

        Depending on the size of the sample, you can look at its spectrum of gamma radiation. Different radioisotopes emit gammas at different frequencies when they decay, providing a distinctive fingerprint.

        High resolution mass spectrometry will also do it for you. I know a chemist who has tricks for detecting femtograms (1E-15) of an element (though his mass resolution isn't very good, you could see a very tiny amount of a transuranic element like plutonium.)

        Really, all you need is to be able to quickly identify areas that are worth further investigation. If you find something that seems suspicious--even if it isn't conclusive--that tells you where to bring in the analytical big guns. Actually, that usually means a lot more cotton swabs. ;)

    • I wonder if we can draw parallels to the boom in usage of such gear as feds ramp up spending to home users with windows firewalls - people logging all kinds of data and jumping to all kinds of conclusions without having the knowledge to separate the wheat from the chaff
  • by Anonymous Coward
    That explains why intensive use of the subway can lead to stupidity.

    Just in Homer's path....
  • by EvilStein ( 414640 ) <.ten.pbp. .ta. .maps.> on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:27AM (#4830927)
    That guy must have a hell of a time getting to work.

    Maybe there's another reason he got strip searched.

    And he was strip searched IN THE SUBWAY STATION? Dude, I hate to break the news, but those weren't cops that were doing the strip searching.
  • Geeze... (Score:2, Funny)

    by eamber ( 121675 )
    Don't purchase a new smoke detector and take it on the subway - they'll likely call in the National Guard.
  • by infolib ( 618234 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:29AM (#4830937)
    A "dirty bomb" could be made out of alpha-active material. Alpha-radiation (He nuclei) will be stopped by a few pieces of paper. If the material is in a suitcase there is no radiation outside.

    When the material is spread by an explosion, a fire or some other way, people will inhale it and it will stick in their lungs, giving them a huge dose of radiation.
  • by puto ( 533470 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:31AM (#4830949) Homepage
    What about this guy?

    http://wcbs880.com/water/watercooler_story_29809 07 52.html

    I never thought cat shit could be more offensive, but add radiation and we take it to a whole new level.

    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.

    This is too funny.

    Puto
  • Isn't this a bit extreme? I mean, if they ran the "magic wand" or whatever over him, the levels would be constant enough to confirm it. I mean, if his head were giving off radiation, it would more or less confirm the story. Since lots of (irradiated?) blood passes through the brain, I would assume that it would have a high concentration?

    Of course, if he had a green glowing trouser snake once they searched him, this would probably tip them off too.

    Um, sorry sir. wow - can you use that thing as, like, a night-lite or something
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:36AM (#4830967)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This is just more fallout (no pun intended) from the Bush/Ashcroft "War On Terrorism", which is really just a thinly veiled way to erode people's Constitutional rights. Do you think that strip searching a cancer patient is a reasonable search as defined by The Constitution? Do you think that radiation detectors that force cancer patients to reveal their illness and treatment to complete strangers is a reasonable form of search?
      Clearly this will prevent airplanes from falling out of the sky and landing on buildings.

      I bet Bush could get approval to perform personal in-home inspections so long as it would prevent errant airplane collisions, cha'know?

    • by LostCluster ( 625375 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:29AM (#4831190)
      September 11 tought us that commecial airliners could be misused as weapons. When you think about it, almost anything when used improperly can be used as a weapon.

      Think of high schools with a "zero tolerance" policy aganst knifes. They'll suspend a student has a kitchen knife in thier bookbag... but they'll forget that if the student puts 3 10 pound textbooks in their bag, and then throws it from the top of a staircase, that becomes a 30 pound dead weight which can cause serious injury. Bookbags don't kill people, people kill people.

      Because we can't think of all the possible ways terrorists can attack, we can only secure against the ones we can think of. The attacks we show we can stop are the ones they won't attempt. There's an unlimited number of unprotected ones they can try.
      • Think of high schools with a "zero tolerance" policy aganst knifes. They'll suspend a student has a kitchen knife in thier bookbag... but they'll forget that if the student puts 3 10 pound textbooks in their bag, and then throws it from the top of a staircase, that becomes a 30 pound dead weight which can cause serious injury. Bookbags don't kill people, people kill people.

        This BS has been happening for years before 9/11 as well. This is yet another injustice that has done nothing to prevent school violence, and turns innocent students into criminals.

        If a high school student is caught with any sort of knife on campus (in some cases a PLASTIC knife or anything that could be mistaken for a knife, gun, or other weapon), for whatever reason, they will be expelled.

        It doesn't matter if they accidentally left the knife in the bag from a hunting trip, thought a butter knife was OK, or whatever. It doesn't matter if the student has no record, is a straight A student, or whatnot.

        This has extended to other sorts of things. Kids have been expelled for giving a bottle of wine to their teachers as a GIFT, bringing advil to school, being ACCUSED of hacking school comptuer systems without proof, etc.

        These kids are then often shipped off to an alternative school that have purposefully been given inferior resources. There they will often will recieve an inferior education to their former peers and have little chance to get into a decent college no matter how they do at that school.

        This sort of thing has been in place for over a decade now in most school districts. It didn't prevent incidents like Columbine.

        Seriously, being expelled is the LAST thing a student thinks about if they intend to kill people. How is the threat of expulsion a deterrent?
    • Hold on there turbo (Score:3, Informative)

      by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 )
      I'm guessing you probably don't know a lot about the radation treatment of the thyroid so allow me to explain:

      They give you radioactive iodine (I believe it's I-131, but I could be wrong) in a non-tribial dose. This will then accumulate in your thyroid. Now It has a pretty short half life, around 8 days, so it doesn't stay in you in a significant quantity for all that long. Also, since it accumulates in the thyroid, damage to teh rest of the body is limited.

      However, notice that I said non-trivial dose. It's enough that you are warned to limit contact with family members for a week, and enough that you can tell if someone has had it done just by pointing a Giger counter at them.

      Along the same lines, my grandma has two metal hips, and is gaurenteed to set off any metal decetor. Well she isn't stupid about it, if she knows she's going through one, she notifies the people that she has metal hips, and they can take the appropriate setps to verify her story.
  • ID Designation (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Traicovn ( 226034 )
    They may choose not to use public transportation to avoid this inconvenience...
    I'm sorry. Getting aroud NYC and many big cities without public transit is expensive, and complicated. Also, I would think that perhaps one might be irritated if they can't use the PUBLIC transit system their tax dollars pay for.
    What will most likely happen in the end is that you will have a letter designation or something on a drivers license or on your state issued id/passport (everyone who flies knows that you have to have id). Yes, this could be defrauded, but anything can...
  • Radiation != Chemo (Score:4, Interesting)

    by FakePlasticDubya ( 472427 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @12:47AM (#4831010) Homepage
    When I submitted this story:

    2002-12-06 18:34:29 Radiation Treatment Patients Set Off Subway Alarms (articles,tech) (accepted)

    The editors changed it, to Chemotherapy... which is obviously not the same... Oh well.
  • by NeuroManson ( 214835 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:28AM (#4831186) Homepage
    As I recall, nuclear power plants have often gone on alert for false positives resulting from radon exposure in the home.

    While the odds are slim, considering the entire length Adirondack and Appalachian mountains range from Georgia to Canada, porions of which contain significant uranium ore veins, there's going to be a considerable amount of radon gas emitted by these veins as they go through the natural process of decay. What does this mean? Inevitably, there will be false positives as well. More people will be detained, more public outcry.

    On a momentary tangent, I have difficulty putting too much weight in New Scientist's journalistic integrity. For example, why haven't pacemakers set off the alarms? While they may be shielded to a certain degree for safety, I doubt that they're 100% shielded against detection.

    And what of nuclear power plant employees, or students of radiological sciences in college, or radiotherapy doctors in hospitals? All of these pick up marginally higher levels of radiation in their fields, why aren't they setting off alarms either?

    To ensure against repeats of that article, the police need to (at least) inform the public of the minimum level of radiation that the sensors will trip on, so that at least innocent people won't be grabbed by police, just because they were picking up an old Radium book they won in an auction online.
  • Braces and Alarms (Score:5, Insightful)

    by wolf- ( 54587 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @02:01AM (#4831271) Homepage
    My son has AFOs on his lower legs, ankles and he has been setting off department store (wal-mart, target, burlington) store alarms for 3 years now.

    My family is tired of being asked to "Step back in the store". We don't any more. You want me, call a cop. Going to detain me over 4 rivets made of an alloy that sets of your alarms? Welcome to civil court. Touch me, welcome to criminal court.

    When technology fails, as in the case of these poor chemo patients, then the person who trusted/decided on the failed technology needs to pay.
    • Re:Braces and Alarms (Score:4, Informative)

      by Knife_Edge ( 582068 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @02:17PM (#4833338)
      Just to save people the effort of googling to find out what an AFO is (I didn't know, at least) -

      http://www.hnpp.org/glossary.htm

      Second definition from the top reads:

      AFO- stands for "Ankle Foot Orthosis" it describes a brace (orthosis) that goes under the foot and up the back of the calf and is used to help with foot drop.
  • by Newer Guy ( 520108 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @02:25AM (#4831346)
    Al Quaida got EXACTLY what they wanted on 9/11/2001! Granted, a few thousand died that day..and a couple of buildings went down...but since then lives have been made miserable for MILLIONS...which is exactly what they wanted to to to us! Our freedoms have been curtailed at the airport..like they'll ever try that again..If they did, they'd be thrown out the window by an entire pissed off airplane. The old ideas of hijacking were to comply with the hijackers' demands...but not any more!! Now we have cancer patients being strip searched whose only crime is taking the subway. We have TV cameras looking at us everywhere, connected up to facial reckognization systems. We have more freedoms curtailed since World War II and unlike the ones then, these loss of freedoms are permanent. Yes, the terrorists got exactly what they wanted..a shift in the United States' citizens' right to freedom. The irony is that the REAL terrorists are Bush and Ashcroft and Congress who've perverted this awful event for their own political ends.
  • McD (Score:5, Funny)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @02:45AM (#4831416) Journal
    McDonald's installed one also, but they had to take it down because their Secret Sauce kept setting it off.
  • by radon222 ( 632149 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @09:35AM (#4832158)
    Sorry folks , but this isnt Chemotherapy or Bracytherapy ... brachytherapy is irradiation with sealed sources which are inside the body . Best name for this is Nuclear Medicine Therapy. ... by the way , I am a Radiation Therapist and a Nuclear Medicine Technologist
  • Base rate fallacy (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hey! ( 33014 ) on Saturday December 07, 2002 @01:50PM (#4833197) Homepage Journal
    This is an example of an error in numerical reasoning called the base rate fallacy.

    The base rate fallacy is trying to interpret the results of a test without considering how common the thing being tested for is in the population being sampled.

    For example, suppose there is a medical test for a disease that has a five percent false positive rate. I then grab somebody off the street and administer the test, and he turns out positive. How certain are we that he has the disease? 95%? No, we cannot say without knowing the probability that any individual pulled off the street has the disease.

    Suppose one person in a thosuand has the disease. There are two ways we can get positive results from the test. On the one hand he may actually have the disease (p = 0.001). If we sample 1000 people, one person will test positive for this reason. On the other hand he may not have the disease (p = .999). If we test 1000 people, 5% of the 999 (about 50 people) will be false positives.

    So, of the 51 positives we'd expect to get, only one person legitimately has the disease. Instead of there being a 95% probability of the disease, there is actually only a 2% probability that a positive test indicates anything at all when applied to a random population. In order to apply the test usefully, I need some independen reason to suspect the person has the disease.

    Even a slight reason for suspicion can alter the interpretation dramatically. For example, suppose I'm about 10% certain a person has the disease. If I tested 1000 people who met this criteria, 100 would test positive because they had the disease, 50. So if I'm 10% certain, then a positive test should make me 66% certain. If I'm 50% certain. then a positive test should make me about 90% certain.

    A lot of public security measures suffer from the base rate problem. For example random drug testing doesn't tell you with much certainty that a person is doing drugs -- you really ought to test only peple you have independent reason to believe are using drugs. The only time widespread screening makes sense is if the base rate of the thing being tested is very high relative to the false positive probability.

    This cancer patient situation is essentially similar. If we have reason to suspect that somebody is a terrorist, if he sets of radioactivity alarms it is very suspicious. If we have no such reason, then whether or not it is suspicious depends on the base rate of nuclear terrorism in the community.

    Now it so happens that the false positive rate for this test is rather small: very few people are walking around radioactive for innocent reasons. ON the other hand, the rate of atomic terrorism in the general population is even smaller by several orders of magnitude.

    This means that this particular alarm essentially tells us nothing about the people who set it off. It is probably not significantly better than a policy of randomly strip searching people.

    However, this is not the only way to look at the problem. Suppose we knew for a fact that there was going to be a suicide dirty bomber somewhere in the city. Screening people in the subway might effectively prevent it from happening in the subway, either by deterring the bomber, or by catching hime, at the price of also catching hundreds of innocent people.

    I think the take home message of this is that we should not use such systems on a routine basis; in cases where we have good reason to do so, we should remember that while if there is a terrorist he'll be culled out by the system, any particular individual culled by the system is not significantly more likely to be guilty than any randomly selected person.

BLISS is ignorance.

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