Cari (Caridad) Borrás is a certified medical physicist in Washington, DC, USA, where she works as an international consultant and has an adjunct faculty position at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences. She obtained a Doctor of Science (Physics) degree from the University of Barcelona, Spain, having done a thesis research project on the dosimetry and embryological effects of Astatine- 211 at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, PA, USA, as a Fulbright scholar. She has lectured in more than 300 seminars/courses/congresses, many organized by her; authored/contributed around 100 articles and six book chapters and edited two books. She is a Fellow of ACR, AAPM, IOMP, HPS, and IUPESM, and has received awards/recognitions from SEFM, AAPM, IOMP, ALFIM, ACCE, ACR, and ABR. Michael G. Stabin is a Certified Health Physicist, President of the Radiation Dose Assessment Resource, Inc., living in Kennewick, WA, USA, where he worked for NV5 – Technical Engineering & Consulting Solutions and Hanford Mission Integration Solutions. He was an Associate Professor in the Radiology and Radiological Sciences Department at Vanderbilt University, in Nashville, TN, and a Scientist at the Radiation Internal Dose Information Center of Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education. He received a Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering (Health Physics emphasis) from the University of Tennessee, is a member of the HPS and the SNMMI, and is also a Fulbright scholar. He has over 225 publications in the open literature, most on internal dosimetry for nuclear medicine applications, including complete textbooks on health physics and internal dose assessment.
‘While this book is aimed primarily at medical physicists with only a basic knowledge of nuclear medicine physics, it also offers up-to-date information crucial for scientists and clinicians involved in this rapidly evolving discipline. Authored by experts in the field, the book is organized into 4 sections and consists of 15 chapters. Particularly noteworthy are the comprehensive tables detailing properties of alpha-/beta-emitters and radiopharmaceuticals, invaluable for medical physicists navigating this complex terrain. In summary, this book offers an excellent primer on the scientific, clinical, and educational dimensions of radiotheranostics for medical physicists. It undoubtedly serves as an indispensable handbook for scientists and clinicians engaged in radiotheranostics.’ Dr. Dimitris Mihailidis, Associate Professor of Radiation Oncology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, September 2024.