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News Affiliate of Family Survival Protocol.com
A
small amount of radioactive material has mysteriously disappeared from a
Toronto research facility. The Sunnybrook Research Institute (SRI)
announced Wednesday evening that a locked, lead-lined cabinet containing
radioactive material went missing some time after June or July of last
year. The working theory is that the cabinet was mistakenly sent to a
scrapyard, said Michael Julius, the institute's vice-president of
research. Although SRI is located at Sunnybrook hospital, Dr. Julius
said the missing cabinet is not a threat to patients. "There is no
impact on patient safety. I really do want to underscore that," he said.
Staff at SRI first noticed the cabinet was missing during a routine
audit on March 21. The cabinet, a heavy 75-cubic-centimetre object, was
clearly labelled as containing radioactive material. Inside were 14
radioactive items, only one of which poses a potential health risk, Dr.
Julius said. That item, about half the size of a dime and used to
calibrate X-ray machines, contains the radioactive isotope
Americium-241, commonly found in smoke detectors. It was encased in its
own locked, lead-and-steel box inside the cabinet. "If you managed to
get it out of the smaller box - which would be a feat, I have to tell
you - if you were to put it in your pocket, for example, and left it in
your pocket for a day or two, you could get a radiation burn," Dr.
Julius said.
.....
Radioactive lab material missing from Sunnybrook research centre
A small amount of radioactive material has mysteriously disappeared from a Toronto research facility.
The
Sunnybrook Research Institute (SRI) announced Wednesday evening that a
locked, lead-lined cabinet containing radioactive material went missing
some time after June or July of last year. The working theory is that
the cabinet was mistakenly sent to a scrapyard, said Michael Julius, the
institute’s vice-president of research.
Although SRI is located
at Sunnybrook hospital, Dr. Julius said the missing cabinet is not a
threat to patients. “There is no impact on patient safety. I really do
want to underscore that,” he said.
Staff at SRI first noticed the
cabinet was missing during a routine audit on March 21. The cabinet, a
heavy 75-cubic-centimetre object, was clearly labelled as containing
radioactive material.
Inside were 14 radioactive items, only one
of which poses a potential health risk, Dr. Julius said. That item,
about half the size of a dime and used to calibrate X-ray machines,
contains the radioactive isotope Americium-241, commonly found in smoke
detectors. It was encased in its own locked, lead-and-steel box inside
the cabinet. “If you managed to get it out of the smaller box – which
would be a feat, I have to tell you – if you were to put it in your
pocket, for example, and left it in your pocket for a day or two, you
could get a radiation burn,” Dr. Julius said.
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