Published December 18, 2025
0 views Journal article

Pilot Study on Risk Perception in Practices with Medical Cyclotrons in Radiopharmaceutical Centers in Latin American Countries: Diagnosis and Corrective Measures.

  • 1. Area of Basic and Environmental Science, Instituto Tecnológico de Santo Domingo (INTEC), Santo Domingo 10602, Dominican Republic.
  • 2. Instituto Nacional del Cáncer Rosa Emilia Sánchez Pérez de Tavares (INCART), Santo Domingo 10602, Dominican Republic.
  • 3. Higher Institute of Technologies and Applied Sciences (INSTEC), Universidad de la Habana, La Habana 10100, Cuba.
  • 4. Cátedra UNESCO de Cambio Climático, Resiliencia y Sistemas Complejos, Instituto Tecnológico de Santo Domingo (INTEC), Santo Domingo 10602, Dominican Republic.

Description

Practices with medical cyclotrons to produce PET radiopharmaceuticals in Latin America represent a technological advance for the diagnosis and treatment of diseases such as cancer, but they involve occupational risks due to exposure to ionizing radiation. This study evaluates the perception of risk in 46 radiopharmacy service workers in 13 countries in the region (Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, Mexico, Peru, Portugal, Dominican Republic and Venezuela), analyzing differences by gender and age. The questionnaire, validated by reliability analysis (Cronbach's coefficient α > 0.7), was statistically analyzed with means, standard deviations (SD) and standard errors (SE), 95% confidence intervals (Student's t-distribution), and coefficients of variation (CV) to assess the dispersion of each variable. The results reveal general underestimation in dimensions such as reversibility of consequences (SD = 0.7142, SE = 0.1053) and familiarity (SD = 0.8410, SE = 0.124), promoting complacency, while immediacy of consequences shows overestimation (SD = 0.9760, SE = 0.1439), amplifying anxiety. By gender, women tend to overestimate (e.g., immediacy = 2.5) and men underestimate (e.g., confidence = 1.78); by age, young people (26-45 years old) overestimate more than older people (≥46 years old). These deviations, with high QoL indicating heterogeneity, suggest interventions such as continuous training, real-time monitoring, and communication campaigns to balance perception. Practical recommendations include job rotations to reduce underestimation due to familiarity and simulations to mitigate emotional overestimation, which are aligned with IAEA regulations (GSR Part 3, SSG-46) to promote a sustainable safety culture.
Enabled by The Lens