Resilience after a nuclear accident: readiness in using mobile phone applications to measure radiation and health indicators in various groups (SHAMISEN SINGS project)

An anonymous web-based survey was developed to check different aspects (SHAMISEN SINGS project): stakeholder awareness and perceptions of available mobile applications (apps) for measuring ionising radiation doses and health/well-being indicators; whether they would be ready to use them in the post-...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of radiological protection Vol. 43; no. 4
Main Authors: Liutsko, Liudmila, Oughton, Deborah, Tomkiv, Yevgeniya, Fattibene, Paola, Monaca, Sara Della, Nuccetelli, Cristina, Goto, Aya, Ohba, Takashi, Lyamzina, Yuliya, Tanigawa, Koichi, Novikava, Natallia, Chumak, Vadim, Pirard, Philippe, Charron, Sylvie, Laurier, Dominique, Croüail, Pascal, Schneider, Thierry, Barquinero, Joan Francesc, Sarukhan, Adelaida, Cardis, Elisabeth
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England 01-12-2023
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Summary:An anonymous web-based survey was developed to check different aspects (SHAMISEN SINGS project): stakeholder awareness and perceptions of available mobile applications (apps) for measuring ionising radiation doses and health/well-being indicators; whether they would be ready to use them in the post-accidental recovery; and what are their preferred methodologies to acquire information etc. The results show that participation of the citizens would be most beneficial during post-accident recovery, providing individual measurements of external ionizing dose and health/well-being parameters, with possible follow-up. Also, participants indicated different preferences for sources to gain knowledge on ionising radiation and for the functions that an ideal app should have. The level of awareness and readiness to use apps to measure ionising radiation dose depended on two main aspects: individual differences (age & gender) and whether people were from countries affected by the previous major accidents. We concluded that stakeholders could have benefits from the data management plan: (1) it potentiates resilience at individual and community level; (2) citizens' measurements contribute to environmental monitoring and public health screening; (3) linkages between different types of data (environmental exposure, individual behavioural diaries, and measurements of health indicators) allow to perform more rigorous epidemiological studies.
ISSN:1361-6498
DOI:10.1088/1361-6498/ad115a