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Radiation Protection Recommendation, 1960 ,No. 114PREAMBLEThe General Conference of the International Labour Organisation, Having been convened at Geneva by the Governing Body of the International Labour Office, and having met in its Forty-fourth Session on 1 June 1960, and Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals with regard to the protection of workers against ionising radiations, which is the fourth item on the agenda of the session, and Having determined that these proposals shall take the form of a Recommendation supplementing the Radiation Protection Convention 1960, adopts this twenty-second day of June of the year one thousand nine hundred and sixty, the following Recommendation, which may be cited as the Radiation Protection Recommendation, 1960: I. General Provisions1. This Recommendation should be given effect to by means of laws or regulations, codes of practice or other appropriate means. In applying the provisions of the Recommendation the competent authority should consult with representatives of employers and workers.
3. For the purpose of giving effect to paragraph 2 of Article 3 of the Radiation Protection Convention, 1960, every Member should have due regard to the recommendations made from time to time by the International Commission on Radiological Protection and standards adopted by other competent organisations. II. Maximum Permissible Levels4. The levels referred to in Articles 6, 7 and 8 of the Radiation Protection Convention, 1960, should be fixed with due regard to the relevant values recommended from time to time by the International Commission on Radiological Protection. In addition, maximum permissible concentrations of radioactive substances in such air and water as can be taken into the body should be fixed on the basis of these levels. 5. Appropriate measures of collective and individual protection should be taken to ensure that the maximum permissible levels referred to in Articles 6, 7 and 8 of the Radiation Protection Convention, 1960, are not exceeded and that the maximum permissible concentrations referred to in Paragraph 4 are not exceeded for such air and water as may be taken into the body. III. Competent Person6. The employer should appoint a competent person to deal on behalf of the undertaking with questions of protection against ionising radiations. IV. Methods of Protection
11. Sources which may involve exposure of workers to ionising radiations, and the areas in which such an exposure may occur or where workers may be exposed to radioactive contamination, should be identified, in appropriate cases, by means of easily recognisable warnings. 12. All sources of radioactive substances, whether sealed or unsealed, in use or stored by an undertaking, should be appropriately recorded.
14. No radioactive substance should be transferred to another employer or undertaking without such notification as may be required by the competent authority.
16. In view of the special medical problems involved in the employment of women of child-bearing age in radiation work every care should be taken to ensure that they are not exposed to high radiation risks. V. Monitoring
18. The competent authority should, where appropriate, require tests to be made for the purpose of detecting contamination of the hands the body and the clothes of persons leaving a workplace. 19. Persons who carry out monitoring in pursuance of the provisions of the Radiation Protection Convention, 1960, and of this Recommendation, should be afforded adequate equipment and facilities for carrying out this work. VI. Medical Examinations20. All medical examinations referred to in the Radiation Protection Convention, 1960, should be carried out by a suitably qualified physician. 21. In the cases referred to in Article 13 of the Radiation Protection Convention, 1960, all necessary special medical examinations should be carried out. 22. The medical examinations referred to in the preceding Paragraphs should not involve the workers in any expense. 23. Physicians who carry out such medical examinations should be afforded adequate facilities for ascertaining the conditions of work of the workers concerned. 24. For all workers who undergo such medical examinations health records should be established and kept in accordance with the requirements of the competent authority. 25. These health records should be in a form standardised at the national level. 26. So far as practicable a complete record of all doses received in the course of work by every worker specified in Paragraph 24 of this Recommendation should be kept so that the cumulative dose may be taken into account for employment purposes. 27. If, as the result of such medical advice as is envisaged in Article 14 of the Radiation Protection Convention, 1960, it is inadvisable to subject a worker to further exposure to ionising radiations in that worker's normal employment, every reasonable effort should be made to provide such a worker with suitable alternative employment. VII. Inspection and Notification28. The inspection services referred to in Article 15 of the Radiation Protection Convention, 1960, should include, or have readily available, a sufficient number of persons fully conversant with radiation hazards and qualified to advise on protection against ionising radiations.
31. The employer should notify the competent authority, as prescribed by it, of a final cessation of work involving exposure of workers to ionising radiations. VIII. Co-operation of Employers and Workers32. Every effort should be made by both the employers and the workers to secure the closest co-operation in carrying out the measures for protection against ionising radiations.
Updated by AS. Approved by EC. Last update: 30.11.2004.
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