No, RadTrack is not FDA-cleared and is not a medical device. It is a personal awareness tool that produces estimated occupational dose values from machine-reported DAP and inverse-square geometry. The methodology and limitations are disclosed in-app and in the PDF footer.
Within the assumptions of the model: NCRP-published scatter fractions for the listed modalities, inverse-square distance falloff, and OSHA-minimum 0.5mm Pb apron attenuation. Real-world variables wraparound shielding, beam-on time outliers, scatter geometry can shift the actual exposure up or down. The estimate is most useful as a personal awareness tool and a sanity check, not as a calibrated reading.
No. RadTrack does not capture any information about who was scanned. The only data is: timestamp, procedure type, DAP value, distance, calculated dose. No patient identifier, no study UID, nothing.
Traveling X-ray techs work across 3-5 hospitals a year. Their dose records stay at every facility they leave. RadTrack is a personal occupational dose log: scatter math, ALARA tracking, portable PDF report. Built around the user, not the facility.