For Dr. McDermott, the data wasn't abstract. Interventional pain physicians like him spend four to five hours a day working with fluoroscopy — standing close to the beam, positioned exactly where scatter radiation concentrates.
The finding that stopped him wasn't just the elevated cancer risk.¹ It was the pattern: the left side of the brain — the same side clinicians face the screen from, the same side closest to the source.
¹ Rajaraman P, et al. Am J Roentgenol. 2016;206(5):1101–8. NCI cohort of 90,957 technologists; brain cancer mortality HR 2.55 (95% CI 1.48–4.40).
Pain medicine often means standing close to the beam for hours at a time. Over years of practice, that exposure builds quietly — case by case, day by day.
For physicians and clinicians ready to take their head and neck protection seriously — Dr. McDermott's code gets you started at half the cost.
Before working with Fortega, Dr. McDermott describes being — in his own words — "at best loosely associated" with the radiation reaching his head and neck. Not from carelessness. From the limitations of what was available.
The traditional thyroid shield had become a frustration familiar to anyone who has worked in a busy fluoroscopy environment: missing, misaligned, wrong height, and disconnected from the vest it was supposed to attach to.
This exposure isn't random — it's built into the way we work. If you haven't thought about it at all, you definitely need to. There's a lot of opportunity for people to just take better care of themselves.
For physicians and clinicians ready to take their head and neck protection seriously — Dr. McDermott's code gets you started at half the cost.
Dr. McDermott isn't alone. Across interventional pain, cardiology, spine surgery, and orthopedics — physicians who work in fluoroscopy environments are beginning to look at occupational radiation exposure with the same rigor they apply to patient safety.
The data has always been there. What's changing is the conversation.
1 Rajaraman P, et al. "Cancer Risks in U.S. Radiologic Technologists Working With Fluoroscopically Guided Interventional Procedures, 1994–2008." American Journal of Roentgenology. 2016 May;206(5):1101–8. National Cancer Institute, NIH. Prospective cohort of 90,957 radiologic technologists. Brain cancer mortality HR 2.55 (95% CI 1.48–4.40). PMID: 26998721.