, three fundamental requirements for taking the optimisation process forward were described: (i) the need for collaboration between radiologists, other radiological medical practitioners, radiographers/medical radiation technologists, medical physicists, and managers; (ii) access to the appropriate methodology, technology, and expertise; and (iii) provision of organisational processes which ensure that tasks, such as equipment performance tests, patient dose surveys, and reviews of protocols, are carried out and acted upon. A high-level requirement is the integration and use of decision sciences, and harmonisation of these optimisation processes across multi-specialty clinical teams and equipment types within healthcare systems. This publication contains information on practical methods needed to carry optimisation forward for different imaging techniques: radiography, fluoroscopy (and fluoroscopically guided interventional procedures), and CT. Many features of digital equipment allow dose levels to be reduced while still maintaining adequate image quality for the clinical task. Staff need to understand the relationship between the different selectable options to use the features effectively. However, there is a wide range in available equipment and training around the world. Provision ranges from clinics with simple radiographic units to specialist hospitals with complex state-of-the-art equipment. Some countries have established communities of medical physicists, while in other countries, there is little or no medical physics support. This presents challenges in communicating requirements for optimisation. This publication addresses these challenges by providing information for facilities within broad categories linked to optimisation arrangements already in place: Level D - preliminary; Level C - basic; Level B - intermediate; and Level A - advanced. It is hoped that through this approach, radiology teams will be able to plan strategies for introducing optimisation techniques that are appropriate for their own facilities and equipment.© 2024 ICRP. Published by SAGE.
ICRP PUBLICATION 159 (Tue,) studied this question.