• Flying Squid
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    2337 months ago

    Someone needs to learn about cumulative effects.

    • @Glowstick
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      1147 months ago

      Sommeliers spit out the wine that they tell you to drink. Very suspicious. /s

      This is such a dumb trope that keeps getting repeated in memes. Dosage size matters.

        • @[email protected]
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          337 months ago

          Its a joke here because we don’t have an anti-vax community.

          If this was Facebook, this meme would be sex and candy for that crowd.

          • teft
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            107 months ago

            I think 99% of statistics are made up on the spot.

          • @[email protected]
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            47 months ago

            Most dumb things are unfunny.

            Sometimes seemingly dumb things are funny because they make you think a little bit and realize that it seems weird to someone who doesn’t understand the context. This one is actually clever because without knowing the context of cumulative effects would be confused by the tech hiding behind a safety shield while telling you it is safe. The humor requires seeing it from someone else’s perspective and having the knowledge of why it seems contradictory.

    • HubertManne
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      397 months ago

      thanks. I was not sure how to respond to this. I suspect they understand that doctors or more likely the nurse or tech would be exposed to dozens of xrays a day instead of less than one a year but you never know.

    • @Everythingispenguins
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      247 months ago

      Also we probably shouldn’t tell them about background radiation.

      For the curious a chest X-ray is about 0.02 mSv where your annual dose from background is about 2.4mSv, but this easily can be twice this if you live at high altitude or in an area with a higher level of radioactive minerals. Or if you are very lucky somewhere where both are a problem.

      Hell airline crews are classified as radiation workers because the higher doses of cosmic radiation puts them over the threshold of on job exposure .

    • @Sakychu
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      97 months ago

      People are upset when I throw a single pebble but when I throw a hand full they suddenly get really mad 🤷‍♀️

    • @Phlogiston
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      77 months ago

      Is it cumulative? Or is it probability — which of course goes up if you shower yourself in radiation multiple times a day?

      • @rockSlayer
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        117 months ago

        Radiation is not a matter of chance, but a matter of how much.

      • @[email protected]
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        87 months ago

        Every day, your body will probably generate at least one cell that would be cancerous if it wasn’t for your immune system. If that probability goes up slightly as a result of mildly increased radiation that day, it likely won’t overload the immune system’s capacity to deal with it. If it is overexposed to radiation, eventually the greater probability of cancerous mutations exceeds the immune system’s capacity.

      • Natanael
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        17 months ago

        It’s probabilistic when it’s 1 particle at a time.

        At these rates of exposure from radiation it becomes primarily cumulative because at some point it’s not a question of if you’ll damage some cells or not, it’s a question of if you’re damaging them faster than they can repair or not.

        There’s still a probabilistic factor in when it leads to medically relevant damage and of what type, but it follows a pretty predictable scale dependent on prior dose

    • MxM111
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      27 months ago

      Someone needs to learn about cumulative grenade.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 months ago

    Imagine you’re a bartender, and every time someone orders a shot, you have to take one too. One? Totally fine. Two? No problem. A hundred? You’re gonna want a bucket (or a lead shield) to dump that shot (or radiation) in

  • @Smoogs
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    1147 months ago

    Tbf they are taking a lot of X-rays throughout the day with multiple patients. You’re but just one of them.

  • NoSpiritAnimal
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    827 months ago

    Eat one meatball sub and you’re fine.

    Eat 20 meatball subs a day, 5 days a week, for your entire professional career? Not medically advisable.

    • @Agent641
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      167 months ago

      You’re not the boss of me!

      • NoSpiritAnimal
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        127 months ago

        I just said medically advisable, I fully support your right to eat as many meatball subs as you feel is right for you.

  • @assassinatedbyCIA
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    577 months ago

    *Rad techs/radiographers

    Also. 1 x-ray no biggie. 10000 x-rays real shit.

  • @A_Random_Idiot
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    377 months ago

    Cause for you its probably your only xray for that year.

    For the doctor its probably the 50th, of 500, that day.

    So they go behind shielding to protect themselves from their massively higher than yours exposure.

    • @Serinus
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      77 months ago

      So you’re saying it’ll hurt you a bit. But as long as it’s not a ton of bits it doesn’t really matter.

  • @hOrni
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    327 months ago

    And they give you a lead vest to cover Your balls, but nothing to cover your head.

  • @Sam_Bass
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    177 months ago

    They stay back as much for radiation protection as for protection from screaming patients being twisted into pretzels for clearer shots of your scoliosis

  • KillingTimeItself
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    117 months ago

    everyone has already covered the obvious here, but another important protocol for dealing with radiation, particularly the spicy kind. Is to incur as low a cost of exposure as possible. I.E. if you don’t need to be in front of the spicy particles. Don’t be.

  • noughtnaut
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    27 months ago

    I do believe this is the most ironing boards I’ve seen in one picture (that doesn’t have to do with ironing boards).

    I was unaware they are apparently sought after for cover?

  • IninewCrow
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    7 months ago

    Also doctors: … we’re not using an x-ray … Instead we’re giving you a CT scan, which will give you 50 to 70 times more radiation exposure than one x-ray.

    • ChaoticNeutralCzech
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      147 months ago

      It kind of helps to have a 3D image sometimes, especially if you can use radiation-shielding or radioactive substances to contrast veins or organs. They are rarely used for bones of course.

    • @[email protected]
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      97 months ago

      From a comment above “a chest X-ray is about 0.02 mSv where your annual dose from background is about 2.4mSv, but this easily can be twice this if you live at high altitude or in an area with a higher level of radioactive minerals”

      So you get a choice between half the radiation from existing on Earth for a year, and a high tech diagnostic image, or… die from whatever disease you might have?

    • Natanael
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      7 months ago

      If the medical outcome from better planning due to having the higher resolution image increases your survival chances enough then it compensates for the radiation exposure.

      Like say, the medical outcome of bleeding out internally vs being saved because the scan showed the doctors where the bleeding is.

      Being a radiation free corpse doesn’t sound great to me

      https://www.health.harvard.edu/cancer/radiation-risk-from-medical-imaging