10 Lessons in Safety: Notable Moments from Albuquerque

By Geoff Giordano

Whether in the airway of a patient, the harsh environment of the Arctic or even in outer space, unique challenges continue to emerge in the battle against laser hazards.

Every two years, the International Laser Safety Conference (ILSC®) spotlights the latest efforts to combat routine and not-so-routine hazards. Amid long-standing discussions about standards, calculations, surgical plumes, tissue interactions and laser pointer strikes on aircraft, invariably there emerges a collection of uncommon issues and solutions. Continue reading

Pressing Laser Safety Issues Addressed at ILSC 2015

Bringing together more than 200 laser safety professionals from around the world, the Laser Institute of America’s International Laser Safety Conference (ILSC®­) touched on pressing medical and industrial hazards — as well as safety in unique environments like the Arctic and even outer space.

Held March 23-26 in Albuquerque, N.M., ILSC 2015 illuminated issues with “lasers of immense peak powers, hand-held laser devices with power that cannot have been imagined a decade ago, and ever-expanding applications of the laser,” noted LIA President Robert Thomas of the Air Force Research Laboratory.

Major U.S. facilities like Sandia National Laboratories and SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory shared insights into safety issues surrounding the use of multiple lasers. At Sandia, keynote presenter Bill Seng noted that many of the lab’s more than 1,400 lasers —running the gamut from UV to visible to IR to white-light devices — are employed on aircraft, ships and even in the back of a van to detect potential airborne toxins.

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ILSC 2015 showcases the importance of CLSOs, CMLSOs in protecting workers and patients

By Geoff Giordano

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — This morning, the International Laser Safety Conference kicks off with the annual meeting of the ASC Z136, the committee that produces the ANSI Z136 laser safety standards. Later, this evening’s welcome reception will be a relaxed introduction to an intensive, informative week.

Dozens of CLSOs and CMLSOs will be among the attendees at ILSC 2015. Take our CLSO/CMLSO survey to help us create a database documenting the benefits of certification.

It’s been two years since the first ILSC I attended, but the impact of that event has remained quite clear. Unlike the rest of LIA’s events, ILSC isn’t all about the wonderful things today’s lasers can help manufacture. ILSC takes a hard look at the damage done when lasers are handled improperly or used under less-than-perfect conditions.

Yes, ILSC does look ahead to new laser technologies and therapies — for example, the future of semiconductor lasers is the subject of a pair of sessions. But the primary focus is the significant human and monetary cost of laser hazards, and the tireless efforts of the experts gathered here to mitigate those hazards.

Among the experts here are dozens of certified laser safety officers (CLSOs) and medical laser safety officers (CMLSOs) who have gone the extra mile to qualify their credentials through the Board of Laser Safety’s tailored programs. Now more than 10 years old, the CLSO and CMLSO programs have bolstered the credibility of laser safety professionals in a broad range of institutions, from NASA and Boeing to numerous universities, laboratories and health-care facilities.

It’s perhaps not exaggeration to suggest that these certified laser safety professionals have prevented millions of dollars in damages and lawsuits thanks to their commitment to pursue CLSO and CMLSO status. One of the many sessions I’m looking forward to will document the changes in attitude of students following laser safety training, research performed by ILSC General Chair John O’Hagan of Public Health England, his PHE colleague Michael Higlett, and John Tyrer, chair of ILSC’s Laser Safety Scientific Sessions.

The biennial ILSC is always an exciting gathering of the top minds in laser safety — the people who write or enforce the standards that keep thousands of workers, researchers and patients safe. The work presented is testament to the discipline of laser safety. To further that discipline, we are asking our CLSOs and CMLSOs to help us create a database of information that attests to the credibility conferred by their certification. Please spend a few minutes taking our CLSO/CMLSO survey; your answers will help us demonstrate the value of certification to your employers and peers.

We look forward to catching up with old friends and meeting new ones this week. Please stop by the LIA booth for exclusive deals on laser safety publications.

Geoff is LIA’s communications director. To share your stories, tips and suggestions, contact him at ggiordano@lia.org.

ILSC 2015: Gathering Top Minds in Laser Safety

By Geoff Giordano

A record number of sponsors and the return of a special-topic luncheon will highlight the latest installment of LIA’s intensive four-day International Laser Safety Conference (ILSC®) in New Mexico this March.

Chaired by Dr. John O’Hagan, head of Public Health, England’s Laser and Optical Radiation Dosimetry Group, ILSC 2015 will be held at the Embassy Suites hotel in Albuquerque from Mar. 23-26. Stepping in for past chairman Ben Rockwell due to a professional conflict, O’Hagan notes that “we have a wide range of topics from the basic bioeffects to very practical offerings.” Continue reading

ILSC 2015: Preparing You for the Challenges of Today’s Technological Advancements and Their Impact on Laser Safety

By Geoff Giordano

On the heels of significant revisions to two parent laser safety standards, the Laser Institute of America’s biennial International Laser Safety Conference (ILSC®) from March 23-26 in Albuquerque, NM, will again showcase the best user practices in industrial and medical photonics applications.

Chaired again by Ben Rockwell from Fort Sam Houston, TX, ILSC 2015 promises to devote significant time to focusing on new guidelines in the just-revised ANSI Z136.1-2014 and IEC 60825 standards for laser safety.

Rockwell, general chair of ILSC since 2007, ensures that the conference has “topics from the very basic, fundamental laser safety — for example, the best way to do calculations, the best way to read select standards and make your personal interpretations and apply those standards — to very advanced topics like fume extraction, what the latest maximum permissible exposure changes are, and how those are relevant to the bioeffects that really occur in the human.”

ILSC will follow its traditional format of Medical and Technical Practical Applications Seminars (PAS) and Laser Safety Scientific Sessions (LSSS). The industry leading experts in charge of those educational tracks promise a hard-hitting slate of trailblazing content. Continue reading