I post this in the main section because questions about radiation and radiation dosage are pretty common. Radiation can be an issue, or non-issue in both large and small situations. And in more places than people might think.
Handy factoid: Sleeping next to someone exposes you to an approximate dose of 0.05 micro-Sieverts. Is that a problem? Follow the links to the handy Radiation Dose Chart (suitable for printing out/framing). Just the thing for a fallout shelter wall.
Closer to home. In the 80s a truck carrying a half dozen small industrial radiation sources, used to check material thickness for process control, crashed. The police rolled up and saw a small radiation hazard sticker on the overturned truck and a box marked with a radiation warnings on it and they blocked traffic, both ways, and started evacuation people. They told people there was a possible radiation hazard.
The NRC was alerted, a local military base sent a team, and many a bunny suit was seen. Some people who were evacuated, or who had been near the accident, said they felt symptoms of radiation poisoning and were directed to a local ER, which set up a receiving and decontamination area. Scores went to the ER where they were stripped and decontaminated because someone thought they detected radiation. Just to be sure.
In the end the company that owned the truck was contacted. They sent out a guy ... who, wearing jeans and tee shirt, simple stooped under the perimeter tape, strode up to the overturned truck, with bare hands stuffed the sources back into the box. He strode back and stuck the box with the sources on the front seat of his waiting truck.
Later investigation showed that there was little or no risk. The detector used at the accident site was faulty. The guy at the ER didn't know much and even though his detector worked correctly he had his instrument set at the most sensitive possible setting and the radiation they did detect was from the limerock driveway they were using as a staging area.
Local emergency services considered it a useful training exercise, and strong warning that they needed to get their act together. After more training and practice they have got a lot better.
Radiation is a scary word but knowing the difference between a micro-Sievert, a milli-Sievert and a Sievert can be the difference between protecting yourself when it is smart to do so, possibly saving yourself serious injury, and freaking out and wasting resources over nothing.
http://blog.xkcd.com/2011/03/19/radiation-chart/This post suggested by, and respectfully stolen from:
http://scienceblogs.com/deltoid/2011/03/andrew_bolt_says_that_radiatio.php