Radiation Exposure from Airport Scanners

A message from the Academy of Radiology Research:

In light of some inquiries regarding the safety of radiation exposure resulting from airport scanners, we are sending some information that you may want to share with your patient constituency.

Generally, there are two types of scanners currently used in the United States:

1.     Millimeter radio wave scanners (appears like a glass booth) – do not use x-rays
2.     Backscatter x-ray scanners (appears like two refrigerators) – use x-rays
 
The radiation dose from a single backscatter system is very low.  A single backscatter scan is equivalent to about 30 minutes of natural background radiation or about 4-5 minutes of air-travel. One needs to undergo 1,000 - 2,000 backscatter scans to receive the radiation dose equivalent to a single chest x-ray dose.

Please read the attached article: Use of full body scanners at airports: Medical risk is negligible, but concerns about privacy remain.