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GIOACCHINO
FAILLA
Gioacchino
Failla, one of the greatest pioneers in the fields of biophysics
and radiobiology, began his career at New York's Memorial Hospital
in 1915. Within a few years of joining the staff, he had established
the first research program devoted to improving the medical applications
of radiation. One of the initial products of this research was the
construction of a radon generator, the first in the United States.
In 1921, Failla was the first to suggest that radiation doses be
expressed as the amount of radiation energy absorbed and made the
first dose estimates in radium therapy in terms of microcalories
per cc of tissue. With the arrival of an X-ray unit at his laboratory
the following year, Failla constructed the first human phantom in
the U.S. so that he could determine the effects of filtration and
distance on X-ray fields in the body. In 1925, upon returning from
a one-year sabbatical with Marie Curie in Paris, Failla published
protocols and described equipment permitting radiotherapists to
deliver the desired doses to their patients accurately. Not the
least of his contributions were his roles in founding the International
Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU), and the Radiation
Research Society. Later in his career, Failla left Memorial Hospital
for Columbia University where he made important contributions to
our understanding of radiation mutagenesis and the induction of
cancer by radiation.
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Index
Of Figures In Radiation History
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