Application for Use of Radioactive Material - The University of Texas 2025

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The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission The NRC is the Federal agency responsible protecting the health and safety of the public and the environment by licensing and regulating the civilian uses of the following radioactive materials: Source material (uranium and thorium)
Emergency Contacts for Help During Radiation Emergencies Federal Emergency Contacts Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) General contact (800) 368-5642 Emergency (301) 816-5100 (24-hr) Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)26 more rows
Radionuclides are used safely and effectively to diagnose and treat a wide variety of diseases more effectively and safely by seeing how the disease process alters the normal function of an organ. To obtain this information a patient swallows, inhales, or receives an injection of a tiny amount of a radionuclide.
Texas became an Agreement State in 1963 and has regulated these radioactive materials since. Texas had previously regulated Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials which NRC did not have the authority to regulate.
Nuclear medicine uses radioactive material inside the body for two reasons: To see how organs or tissue are functioning (diagnosis). To target and destroy damaged or diseased organs or tissue (treatment).
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Radioactive materials are used to help some researchers create and test new medicines, technologies, and procedures that benefit plants, animals and people. Research laboratories must follow strict rules to order, store, use and dispose of radioactive material.
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) The NRC works with DOT to set safety rules for shipping radioactive material. The NRC oversees the design and use of special packaging for shipping radioactive materials. DOT oversees safety during the actual shipping.
The Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) was initially involved in radiological health activities as early as 1947. We strive to prevent unnecessary radiation exposure to the public through effective licensing, registration, inspection, enforcement, and emergency response.

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