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Scientists Cast Doubt on TSA Tests of Full-Body Scanners
The Transportation Security Administration says its full-body X-ray scanners are safe and that radiation from a scan is equivalent to what's received in about two minutes of flying. The company that makes them says it's safer than eating a banana.
But some scientists with expertise in imaging and cancer say the evidence made public to support those claims is unreliable. And in a new letter sent to White House science adviser John Holdren, they question why the TSA won't make the scanners available for independent testing by outside scientists.
The machines, which are designed to reveal objects hidden under clothing, have the potential to close a significant security gap for the TSA because metal detectors can't find explosives or ceramic knives, which can be just as sharp as the box cutters that hijackers used on 9/11.
They are also important for TSA's public relations battle over the alternative, the "enhanced pat-down," which has bred an epidemic of viral videos: A 6-year-old girl is touched from head to toe. A former Miss USA says she was violated. A software programmer warns a screener, "If you touch my junk, I'm going to have you arrested."
After the underwear bomber tried to blow up a Northwest Airlines plane on Christmas Day 2009, the TSA ramped up deployment of full-body scanners and plans to have them at nearly every security line by 2014.
There are two types of body scanners. Millimeter wave machines emit a radio frequency similar to cellphones. Backscatters work like a fast-moving X-ray. In the latter, the rays bounce off the skin and create a fuzzy white image of the passenger's body. Because the beam doesn't go through the body, most of its radiation is received by the skin.
The TSA says the backscatter technology has been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration, the National Institute for Standards and Technology and the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. Survey teams are using radiation-detecting dosimeters to check the machines at airports. The TSA says the results have all confirmed that the scanners don't pose a significant risk to public health.
According to the agency and many radiation experts, the dose is so low, even for children or cancer patients, that someone would have to pass through the machines more than a thousand times before approaching the annual limit set by radiation safety organizations.
But the letter to the White House science adviser, signed by five professors at University of California, San Francisco, and one at Arizona State University, points out several flaws in the tests. Studies published in scientific journals in the last few months have also cast doubt on the radiation dose and the machines' ability to find explosives.
A number of scientists, including some who believe the radiation is trivial, say more testing should be done given the government's plans to put millions of passengers through the machines. And they have been disturbed by the TSA's reluctance to do so.
"There's no real data on these machines, and in fact, the best guess of the dose is much, much higher than certainly what the public thinks," said John Sedat, a professor emeritus in biochemistry and biophysics at UCSF and the primary author of the letter.
The same group stirred controversy last year when it sent a letter to Holdren arguing that while the overall dose to the body may be low, the TSA hadn't quantified the dose to the skin. Last fall, FDA and TSA officials released a study that estimated the dose to the skin to be twice the dose to the body, though still extremely low.
In the most recent letter sent to Holdren on April 28, the professors note that the Johns Hopkins lab didn't test an actual airport machine. Instead, the tests were done on a model built by the manufacturer, Rapiscan, and configured to resemble a system previously tested by the TSA.
The researchers' names have been kept secret, and the report on the tests is so "heavily redacted" that "there is no way to repeat any of these measurements," they wrote.
The physics and medical professors also took issue with the device used to measure the radiation. Although the device, known as an ion chamber, is commonly used to test medical equipment, they argue that the detector gets overwhelmed by the amount of radiation the backscatter deposits in a short time and might not provide accurate readings.
Helen Worth, a spokeswoman for the Johns Hopkins lab, referred questions to the TSA.
Part of the trouble is that there is no ideal device for measuring the radiation dose given by backscatter X-rays, said David Brenner, director of the Columbia University Center for Radiological Research. The machines emit a pencil beam that rapidly moves across and up and down the body, he said.
"We are one of the oldest and biggest radiological research centers in the country, and we find this to be a very hard technical problem," said Brenner, who was not involved with the letter.
Another issue is that there is a lot of uncertainty with the model used to estimate cancer risk from radiation exposure to the skin, said Rebecca Smith-Bindman, a UCSF radiologist who also was not involved in the letter.
Smith-Bindman, who has testified before Congress about excessive radiation from medical scans, studied the TSA reports and said she wasn't concerned about the airport X-rays.
The risks are "truly trivial," she wrote in an article for the Archives of Internal Medicine. A passenger would have to undergo 50 airport scans to reach the level of a dental X-ray, 1,000 for a chest X-ray, and 4,000 for a mammogram.
Though imperfect, the available models predict that the backscatters would lead to only six cancers over the course of a lifetime among the approximately 100 million people who fly every year, Smith-Bindman concluded.
"There's really unnecessary fear related to these scans," she said. "What I'm not as comfortable with is that there has not been access to these machines. They are not being tested on the same regulatory basis that we see on medical equipment."
After her article was published, Smith-Bindman was contacted by a TSA public affairs officer. During the conversation, she suggested that she or other outside scientists be allowed to test the machine. The official was shocked by the suggestion and said such access could tip off people who want to avoid detection, Smith-Bindman said.
"It was not appreciating that there's legitimate scientific questions that have to be balanced against the security questions," she said.
The TSA did not respond to ProPublica's questions about why it wouldn't allow outside testing. But at a congressional hearing in March, Robin Kane, assistant administrator for security technology, said doing so would expose a lot of sensitive information the agency wouldn't normally share publicly. The machines had already been tested several times, he said, and if set up securely, the agency would allow more testing.
The available information leaves scientists with little to work with. Peter Rez, the Arizona State physics professor who signed the letter to Holdren, has tried to calculate the radiation by examining the handful of backscatter images that have been released publicly.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center, a civil liberties group, sued the Department of Homeland Security, TSA's parent agency, in federal court seeking release of 2,000 backscatter images used in testing. But it has not been successful.
The few images that have been made public do not reveal faces or detailed private features. The TSA says the images Rez used are out of date, but Rez says the current image on TSA's website is unusable.
Using the earlier images, Rez concluded in the Radiation Protection Dosimetry journal that it was highly unlikely the machines could have produced such high-quality images with doses of radiation as low as those described by TSA. He estimated the dose, while still very small, is 45 times higher than the results measured by Johns Hopkins.
Applying Rez's numbers, Brenner wrote a paper for the journal Radiology, estimating that 100 additional cancers would develop for every 1 billion scans.
For Rez, the real danger occurs if the machine stops in the middle of a scan, allowing the beam to focus on a tiny area for several seconds. Given that the backscatter works with a wheel rotating at a high speed, and that the agency plans to use the scanners continuously 365 days a year, mechanical failures are likely, he said.
The TSA says that the scanners have safety systems, such as automatic shutoffs and emergency stop buttons, that will kill the beam in the event of any problem that could result in abnormal radiation. How those fail-safe systems work isn't entirely clear.
When Johns Hopkins researchers visited the Rapiscan facility, the automatic termination appeared to work. But the full results of the shutoff tests are redacted.
What's more, the test system didn't have an emergency stop button.
Follow on Twitter: @MichaelGrabell


29 Comments so far
Show All"The TSA says that the scanners have safety systems, such as automatic shutoffs and emergency stop buttons, that will kill the beam in the event of any problem that could result in abnormal radiation. "
Didn't the Deepwater Horizon have safety systems as well? Have the safety systems been tested?
They probably won't tell the TSA employees where the emergency shutoff switch is located. After all, if this secret knowledge was released, then the "terrorists" would know how to shut it off.
Don't worry. If there is an emergency, a representative from the factory will be dispatched within 48 hours to shut down the errant X-ray beam.
In addition to the radiation hazard, the TSA goons have now started requiring travellers to remove handerchiefs, post-it notes, plastic belt buckles, and just about everything else that won't expose your skin.
If these scanners are so effective, why do travellers now need to remove more than they had to remove in the pre-scanner days ?
Because the scanners are anything but reliable.
Recent (ongoing) test phase in Hamburg, Germany showed that even sweat may show up as a safety hazzard. They may work under Lab conditions, but not in real life.
Not sure, if there is a statistic on how many people had to go through the scanner for a second or third time and eventually an pad-down. If this was such a great technology, I should be able to walk through it with my shoes, keys, belt, cell pone etc.
Apparently, at current, it is more a waste of money in the name of "assumed" safety.
TSA has gone totally astray and no one reins them in. I used to fly every week, but gave up my job.
The government/medical complex can be injurious to your health. Remember when ALL vaccines were considered safe (even those with thimerosal given to infants). Also everyone should should research Fosamax and other drugs in that catagory used for 'so called' bone building. Also check out the research on fluoride - an industrial waste. Remember when mothers were advised to bathe their babies with Phisohex. Didn't it contain hexachlorophene? Later the formula was changed. Does anyone need to be reminded of the whole HRT scam?
When the government says something is 'safe', better follow the money.
Thank you for your comment.
Do we also remember when the FDA let all types of contaminated beef, chicken and eggs allowed countless people to get sick. Or die? Or the fact that they let the harmful VIOXX on the market despite the repeated warnings of the side effects? and then let it back on the market with a black box label stating it could be hazardous to your health?
Natural news.com had many excellent articles on the FDA and what they are doing, or not doing. They are in the pockets of Pharma.
Off topic, but the EPA decided not to enforce companies to clean up the air.. Indefinitely. Oh how I love this new government with its hope and change BS
I worry about the software standards and review procedures that are used to create these machines. The FDA and any manufacturer of any medical device goes through a lot effort to try to ensure safety, expecially with X-Ray machines. (Look up Therac-25 for a sobering discussion.)
The speed at which these machines were introduced makes me think that a lot of shortcuts had to be taken. I suspect that is the real reason for the secrecy - not the security aspects.
I agree. It is difficult to get software correct when rushing a product to market. With some software, it is simply annoying. But when you expose folks to radiation, then it borders on depraved indifference. I think the manufacturers and marketers rely on the fact that medical complications of radiation exposure can take years to develop.
Aside from the fact that these machines are not necessary, and were not tested by independent scientists, here is another problem:
Medical machinery in hospitals is subject to strict rules about periodic calibration by highly trained technicians. What are the rules about maintaining these machines to assure that the radiation does not exceed the stated levels?
I think these folks are missing the point. It doesn't matter if the scanners are ineffective against terrorists or if they give you cancer. What's important is that Former Homeland Security Savior, Michael Chertoff, thought that they would be good for everybody. So did his business clients, the ones who manufacture the scanners.
The fact that the TSA and the "Homeland" Security folks won't allow comprehensive, independent testing of these freakin' machines says everything we need to know.
Precisely.
I hope to never have to fly anywhere again, but if I do I will opt for the sexual assault over the death ray.
www.rockyflatsgear.com
Good comments here. It is always difficult to prove the exposure/cancer connection. If that is ever accomplished watch for a special Court to protect the manufacturers - like the Vaccine Court which was set up to protect the pharmaceutical companies that manufacture vaccines.
Nothing to see here folks, move along. We are from the government and we are here to keep you safe. You need not worry yourself with trivial questions; you do trust us don't you?
We are here to keep public order -you are aware there are heavy penalties for asking inappropriate questions?
" There is really unnecessary fear related to these scans. The risk is trivial". Rebecca-Smith- Bindman. " Rebecca has it backwards. There is really unnecessary fear related to terrorists. The risk is trivial. "There is no real data on these machines". John Sedat. Sound familiar? There is no real data on Osama; there is no real data on 911; there is no real data on Iraq's WMD'S. Ad nauseum!
PR
Excellent!
Tnx
As a frequent flyer for business, I prefer the VERY intrusive patdowns to being irradiated weekly by these ineffective, uncalibrated machines.
Of course they are not really designed to keep us safe, because the whole TSA is a scam designed to keep us fearful and compliant with the new Amerikan government. If they intended to keep us safe, they would use techniques like Israel's.
Considering the low risk of being bombed by a fellow passenger, and a much higher risk of problems from unscanned cargo and airport employees who are not regularly searched, etc., it is no wonder that the majority of passengers just feel harassed by the TSA.
These companies are as trustworthy as those who sold machines to shoe stores so children could see the bones of their feet in order to get parents to buy their kids more shoes. Those x-ray machines must have been safe in their heyday, otherwise they wouldn't have been marketed. Right?
Those fluoroscope X-ray shoe machines were great!
Not only could you wiggle your toes and see them right inside of your shoes, but it kept the kids entertained for hours while the rest of the family did their shopping.
How come the government interfered with private business in this case?
Where are the Libertarians when you really need them?
Or as Janis Joplin sang "Freedom is just another word for no toes left to lose" or something like that...
I understand that Israeli agents walked the underwear bomber onto a Northwest Airlines plane on Christmas Day - who is it that makes these scanners???
Israeli Security Expert to Canada: 'Full Body Scanners Useless'
Published: 04/25/10,
An Israeli security expert told Canadian officials their multi-million-dollar investment in full-body scanners for airports across the country was “useless” and could easily be hoodwinked by terrorists.
Rafi Sela, former chief of security at the Israel Airport Authority, spoke with members of Canada's House of Commons Transport Committee via video hookup from Kfar Vradim last Thursday. He told the lawmakers, who were investigating the state of Canada's aviation safety, that the 44 imaging machines – each costing $250,000 – were a response that was too little and too late.
“I don't know why everybody is running to buy these expensive and useless machines,” Sela commented. “I can overcome the body scanners with enough explosives to bring down a Boeing 747. That's why we haven't put them in our airport.”
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/137184
>>>> because metal detectors can't find explosives or ceramic knives, which can be just as sharp as the box cutters that hijackers used on 9/11.
Yes, be sure to drop in unsupported tangential reinforcements for the Official Story.
yes, that blatant turd gagged me, too...
the entire story is a stinking reinforcement of the Official Story...
don't fly...let the rich have the radiation...we'll get the land back that way...
Ah, you two beat me to it.
Anyhoo...citation please, Michael Grabell, for your statement, "the box cutters that hijackers used on 9/11."
http://archives.californiaaviation.org/airport/msg39871.html
It does not matter if they are effective or safe. They provide CONTRACTS for connected people like Michael Chertoff. And they train the population to submit to anything out of fear. What's not to like?
Federal Notice to airline passengers:
Due to heightened concern for potential terrorist hijackings or bombings a new procedure has been initiated.
1. You must report to the airport security terminal 8 hours before your flight. Bring all your medical records for prostheses, stints, pacemakers, etc. These must be countersigned after a security review and verification by a panel of physicians.
2. Please deposit your clothes at the entrance and put on the disposable hospital gown that will be issued to you. Follow the yellow line to the next station, where you will give tissue samples for analysis and DNA testing.
3. You will be subjected to a high colonic irrigation and a powerful emetic.
4. You will receive a complete CAT scan. Any anomalies found will be compared with your medical records.
5. You will be conducted to a dressing area where you will be able to buy new TSA examined clothes.
6. You will be taken to a secure holding area until your flight is called. Enjoy your flight.
Remember, your safety is our occupation.
Sincerely,
The folks at TSA
Will these same regs apply at bus stations, train terminals and shopping malls?
Can't be too safe, you know.
I am not afraid of being blown up by terrorists aboard an airliner. I am afraid of being X-rayed or groped by misguided "Homeland Security" Operatives. I haven't flown since the summer of 2001 and probably will continue to just travel by automobile or Amtrak to avoid unnecessary and harmful "security measures".
Depletion of the Earth's petroleum reserves will probably make airline travel prohibitively expensive by 2020, anyway.