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About The Book
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<p>The path from clinical requirements to technical implementation is filtered by the translation of the modality to the technology. An important part of that filter is that the modality be safe. For that to be the case it is imperative to understand what clinical parameters affect the safety of a treatment and then determine how the technology can affect those parameters.</p><p>This book provides a practical introduction to particle therapy. It provides a thorough introduction to the technological tools and their applications and then details the components that are needed to implement them. It explains the foundations of beam production and beam delivery that serve to meet the necessary clinical requirements. It emphasizes the relationship between requirements and implementation including how safety and quality are considered and implemented in the solution. The reader will learn to better understand what parameters are important to achieve these goals.</p><p>Particle Therapy Technology for Safe Treatment will be a useful resource for professionals in the field of particle therapy in addition to biomedical engineers and practitioners in the field of beam physics. It can also be used as a textbook for graduate medical physics and beam physics courses.</p><p>Key Features</p><ul> <p> </p> <li>Presents a practical and accessible journey from application requirements to technical solutions</li> <p> </p> <li>Provides a pedagogic treatment of the underlying technology</li> <p> </p> <li>Describes how safety is to be considered in the application of this technology and how safety and quality can be factored into the overall system</li> </ul><p>Author Bio </p><p>After receiving his PhD in nuclear physics <b>Dr. Jacob Flanz</b> was the Accelerator Physics Group leader and Principal Research Scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) USA where he designed the recirculator and the GeV stretcher/storage ring. He joined Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Harvard and became project and technical director of proton therapy with responsibility for specifications integration and commissioning ensuring safe clinical performance. He invented the universal nozzle and led the design and implementation of beam scanning at MGH in 2008 including quality assurance. Dr. Flanz has been involved in several FDA applications for particle therapy. He developed and taught the US Particle Accelerator School course Medical Applications of Accelerators and Beams. He was cochair of education and is currently the president of the Particle Therapy Co-Operative Group.</p><p><em><strong>Exercise solutions to accompany this book can be accessed via the 'Instructor Resources' tab on the book webpage.</strong></em></p>