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BROOKLYN 2RADIOTHERAPY
Rebecca PRIESTLEY
Sat 31st Aug 2013Session 2 / Talk 2
10:45 – 11:15
ABSTRACT
At the turn of the 20th century, New Zealand doctors, electricians and
entrepreneurs were early adopters of the recently discovered X-rays, first
for diagnostic and then for therapeutic applications. Radium therapy
followed, and by 1929 New Zealand hospitals had a greater supply of
radium per head of population than the UK. This talk will trace the early
uses of X-rays, radium and other radiation technologies in the New Zealand
medical profession and in wider society and will include fringe treatments
such as ‘radon therapy’ – drinking radioactive water was recommended as
a treatment for gout, arthritis and depression – as well as mainstream
techniques such as diagnostic X-rays and radium for cancer treatment.
Mad on Radium: medical radiation in early 20th century
New Zealand
Dr Rebecca PriestleySchool of Chemical and Physical Sciences
Victoria University of Wellington
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wilhelm-Roentgen%27s-X-ray-photograph-of-his-wife%27s-hand.png
“The expose time for an ankle was about 15 seconds. As no timing device was incorporated in this model we used the old photographic method — one, two, three, etc., etc., eventually arriving at 15. Another couple of seconds were added for luck. This proved alright if the tube had not emitted several sparks and frightened the patient and he or she had not moved … .”
John L. Campbell, ‘Thirty-six Years in Radiography’, Health and Service, 8(1), 1953, p. 49.
http://www.orau.org/ptp/collection/quackcures/radiumwaterjarwtr.htm
“By far the most satisfactory method of administration is that of drinking radio-active water. Not only is the dosage easy to determine and the method of administration simple, but the period of retention in the body is markedly longer than in the case of inhalation. Lazurus [ … ] points out the importance of a ‘sipping cure’ rather than a drinking cure – that is, the importance of taking sips at frequent intervals, thereby maintaining the charge in the blood, rather than of taking large draughts at longer intervals.”
Arthur Wohlmann, Mineral Waters and Spas of New Zealand, Government Printer, Wellington, 1914, pp61-62
According to German physicians Saubermann and Lazarus, working at the Marien Hospital in Berlin, and publishing in respected medical and scientific journals:
1. … radium emanation in moderate doses promotes the multiplication and growth of healthy cells and the decay of morbid ones.
2. Emanation increases the output of urine.3. Emanation increases the activity of the digestive tract, and
especially the excretory activity of the bowels.4. It increases the excretion of uric acid …5. It dilates the blood vessels.6. It diminishes the viscosity of the blood …7. It lowers the blood pressure.8. It increases metabolism …9. It has a profound nerve-soothing effect.10. It increases sexual activity.11. It modifies the constitution of the blood, causing first hyper-
leucocytosis, then leucopenia and increase in the number of red corpuscles.
Arthur Wohlmann, Mineral Waters and Spas of New Zealand, Government Printer, Wellington, 1914, pp61-62
http://www.orau.org/ptp/collection/quackcures/radiumwaterjarwtr.htm
Radioactive Substances Act 1949: a license now needed to use, own or sell radioactive substance or irradiating apparatus.
Recommendations for Protection from Radiation Hazards 1951: Radioactive substances are “potentially lethal agents and should be treated accordingly”
Exposure may:- cause injuries to the superficial tissues- cause damage to the blood and the bloodforming organs,
producing, for example, anaemia and leukaemia- induce malignant tumours- cause cataract, obesity, impaired fertility, reduced life span- have genetic effects which may affect the progeny of the
persons exposed
Source: John Campbell, Rutherford: Scientist Supreme, AAS Publications, Christchurch, 1999, p304.
1954
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