8701 - Definitions.

§ 8701. Definitions. As used in this article:    1. "Clinical" shall mean activities directly relating to the treatment  or diagnosis of human ailments.    2.  "Specialty" or "specialty area" shall mean the following branch or  branches of special competence within medical physics:    (a) "Diagnostic radiological physics" shall mean the branch of medical  physics  relating  to  the  diagnostic  application  of  radiation,  the  analysis  and  interpretation of image quality, performance measurements  and the calibration of equipment associated with the production and  use  of  such  radiation,  the  analysis  and  interpretation of measurements  associated with patient doses and exposures, and  the  radiation  safety  aspects associated with the production and use of such radiation;    (b)  "Medical health physics" shall mean the branch of medical physics  pertaining to the radiation safety aspects of the use of  radiation  for  both  diagnostic  and  therapeutic purposes, and the use of equipment to  perform appropriate radiation measurements;    (c) "Medical nuclear physics" shall mean the branch of medical physics  pertaining  to   the   therapeutic   and   diagnostic   application   of  radionuclides,  excluding  those  used in sealed sources for therapeutic  purposes, the analysis and interpretation  of  performance  measurements  associated with radiation imaging equipment and performance oversight of  radionuclide   calibration   equipment   associated  with  the  use  and  production  of  radionuclides,  the  analysis  and   interpretation   of  measurements  and  calculations associated with patient organ doses, and  the radiation safety aspects associated with the production and  use  of  such radionuclides; and    (d) "Therapeutic radiological physics" or "radiation oncology physics"  shall  mean  the  branch  of medical physics relating to the therapeutic  application of radiation, the analysis and interpretation  of  radiation  equipment  performance  measurements  and  the  calibration of equipment  associated with the production and use of such radiation,  the  analysis  and  interpretation  of  measurements associated with patient doses, and  the radiation safety aspects associated with the production and  use  of  such radiation.    3.  "Medical  physics" shall mean the branch of physics limited to the  field of radiological physics.    4. "Radiation" shall mean  all  ionizing  radiation  above  background  levels  or  any  non-ionizing radiation used in diagnostic imaging or in  radiation oncology.    5. "Radiological physics" shall mean diagnostic radiological  physics,  therapeutic  radiological physics or radiation oncology physics, medical  nuclear physics and medical health physics.    6.  "Radiological  procedure"  shall  mean  any   test,   measurement,  calculation  or  radiation  exposure  for  the  purpose  of diagnosis or  treatment of any medical condition of  a  human,  including  therapeutic  radiation,  diagnostic  imaging  and  measurements, and nuclear medicine  procedures.