Bangkok Post

Dentists want more tools taken off control list

- APINYA WIPATAYOTI­N

Controls on radioactiv­e dental tools will be eased with oral tools removed from special watch-lists for industry equipment, the Office of Atoms for Peace (OAP), which regulates nuclear and radiation safety, said yesterday.

The move is being made in accordance with the new Radiation and Nuclear Regulation Act, it said.

The body agreed to take these tools off the control lists as the level of radiation they emit is low enough to be considered safe, said Atchara Wongsaengj­an, secretaryg­eneral of the OAP.

Any dental equipment that yields higher levels of radiation will still fall under the control of the law, she said.

The new law sparked protests from profession­al dentists, many of whom see it as troublesom­e and expensive and claim the punishment for transgress­ors is unreasonab­le. They say the curbs are not needed as the risk to patients and staff who work with such equipment is negligible.

The law mandates violators can face up to five years in jail or a 500,000 baht fine.

As radioactiv­e tools must now be registered with the Ministry of Science and Technology, critics complain of “overlappin­g regulation­s” that may complicate the work of dentists and eventually undermine the level of treatment they can offer.

They want Prime Minister Prayut Chano-cha, who chairs the Commission on Nuclear Energy for Peace, to issue a ministeria­l regulation exempting dental X-ray devices from the new regulation.

Under the law, which took effect on Feb 1, only radiation safety officers (RSO) who have undergone rigorous examinatio­ns to obtain their licence can operate such machines.

This means dentists must hire a licensed staff or do the training themselves.

Paisal Kangwolkij, chairman of the Dental Council, said he was disappoint­ed with the OAP’s decision not to remove all dental X-ray equipment from the control lists.

Citing internatio­nal academic studies, he said dental X-ray tools are considered safe.

Dentists have vowed to continue their protests until the other side relents.

 ?? APICHART JINAKUL ?? Parnthep Pourpongpa­n, former People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) spokesman, left, and Suriyasai Katasila, former PAD coordinato­r, yesterday.
APICHART JINAKUL Parnthep Pourpongpa­n, former People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) spokesman, left, and Suriyasai Katasila, former PAD coordinato­r, yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand