http://www.kansascity.com/2010/09/11...ainst-ban.html
It seems the government has finally taken notice of the isotope crisis and they're trying to secure a US supply. However a senator from Missouri is single-handedly stonewalling the effort because he thinks it will hurt US exports of highly enriched uranium. There are only 5 nuclear reactors world wide that produce medical isotopes. All of them are old. You've probably heard me whine about it on CS a few times. Canada's NRU reactor in Chalk River supplies half of the US isotope supply. It was down for over a year for repairs, so we were relying on the Dutch reactor. Then there was that pesky volcano explosion that grounded all flights coming out of Europe. The other reactors really can't meet global supply demands when both Canada and the Netherlands are offline.
Limited supply has lead to a certain amount of rationing. I can recall several stretches where all non-emergency scans were off limits because there was not enough isotope. There was an interesting article in the JNMT about rationing criteria and how it is affecting patient care. We were also forced to use alternative isotopes that frankly produce lower quality images and/or expose us and the patient to more radiation.
Without a domestic supply of isotopes, traditional Nuclear Medicine in the US is in a very real danger of dying out. Unlike vaccines and antibiotics, the isotopes cannot be stockpiled because of their short half-lives. Honestly, I don't see the problem with keeping weapons-grade uranium here and out of countries, like say, Iran. Senator Bond needs to back off and let this happen. The medical community NEEDS a stable, domestic supply of medical isotopes.
It seems the government has finally taken notice of the isotope crisis and they're trying to secure a US supply. However a senator from Missouri is single-handedly stonewalling the effort because he thinks it will hurt US exports of highly enriched uranium. There are only 5 nuclear reactors world wide that produce medical isotopes. All of them are old. You've probably heard me whine about it on CS a few times. Canada's NRU reactor in Chalk River supplies half of the US isotope supply. It was down for over a year for repairs, so we were relying on the Dutch reactor. Then there was that pesky volcano explosion that grounded all flights coming out of Europe. The other reactors really can't meet global supply demands when both Canada and the Netherlands are offline.
Limited supply has lead to a certain amount of rationing. I can recall several stretches where all non-emergency scans were off limits because there was not enough isotope. There was an interesting article in the JNMT about rationing criteria and how it is affecting patient care. We were also forced to use alternative isotopes that frankly produce lower quality images and/or expose us and the patient to more radiation.
Without a domestic supply of isotopes, traditional Nuclear Medicine in the US is in a very real danger of dying out. Unlike vaccines and antibiotics, the isotopes cannot be stockpiled because of their short half-lives. Honestly, I don't see the problem with keeping weapons-grade uranium here and out of countries, like say, Iran. Senator Bond needs to back off and let this happen. The medical community NEEDS a stable, domestic supply of medical isotopes.
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