Perhaps you can enlighten me then Geoff:
I appreciate that the management of equipment lies with EBME but the equipment QA is or was carried out by Radiation Protection, in the UK at least. Going back further physicists were US clinicians as well. Most contracts for Radiation protection listed on tenders have a component of Ultrasound QA, where this is implemented. This has been my experience and focus over the last 10 years in a physics coop but the message I am trying to get across is not the right or wrong of who carries out the QA.
You are right to ask "what is Phil selling" and you could have also asked "why now"? To be honest I had just about abandoned any hope or interest in US QA test methods using Satrapa's void phantoms and put it down to just bad luck. I was like King Canute holding back the tide when everyone else was out there boating and enjoying the waves. I had settled into a routine of contract management, physics QA and best of all pushing grandkids around Hexham in the pram.
One day I was assessing a breast US scanner and came across a anomaly which I could not ignore. It was decided by the members that we should inform the MHRA and that started an avalanche which ended up with us loosing the contract for radiation protection services through no fault of our own. The anomaly is on the web and if your members are interested I can provide the password for a limited period:
https://medicalphysicscoop.co.uk/2017/03/17/anomaly/Its password protected to stop general viewing and there is some remaining issues that we need to address with the manufacturer as well as the data being a source for a potential publication.
Fortunately we had published the paper as mentioned in the last post, which gave us some credibility when in discussions with the US physics community and the MHRA but turning the IPEM boat around to a different way of thinking, takes a long long time. Meanwhile a couple of very recent posts on the physics JISCMAIL from technologists with concerns over probe repair came to light and I suspect that this is the tip of the iceberg and these were the good guys. It has been clear for some time that IPEM currently have no answer to a test method capable of showing subtle probe defects albeit they have made it clear that without guidance from a US MPE, probe repair should not be considered.
Acceptance by the IEC committee TS 61390 by such esteemed professors as Dr Paul Carson and Dr Peter Edmonds means we really do not have to sit like mushrooms in the dark any longer. Sure, we need evidence to back up the IEC approval if we are to get revised IPEM guidance but that can only come through use. We have the anomaly mentioned above but there needs to be many more people pushing the US agenda for change. It is my hope that this community can help me identify just how big a problem this probe repair issue is and what QA if any is implemented. So that's what I am selling Geoff, change in thinking, change in our capability to say no to bad probes, change in the perceived merit of US QA, change in the relevance of QA to clinical diagnosis and perhaps a few less sleepless nights wondering if we made the right decision. Who knows, if enough people engage this time, with your help, perhaps we can take what is in essence a ageing inventor and a sales / enthusiast guy in a garden shed to innovate a new way of product delivery also.
PS for some people out there this is bad news. They will have invested heavily in probe repair in their hospital. Having a test method capable of detection of subtle defects raises the question of patient recall and potential litigation. Perhaps there is a window for reconciliation, "we never knew" but that window is closing fast.
Regards
PC