John Trowbridge, Professor of Physics at Harvard University, wrote, "No one appears to have had the experience of Dr. Rollins in exhausting X-ray tubes to the point of greatest efficiency". Rollins was one of the earliest pioneers to understand the possible dangers of X-rays. Following a radiation-induced injury to his hand, Rollins developed new X-ray technology and techniques to reduce patient exposure to radiation. Such developments include the introduction of leaded
X-ray tube casings, the use of
collimators, and the invention of
high-voltage tubes. In 1901, he suggested practitioners and patients wear
leaded glasses and a
radiopaque shield to cover the parts of the patient's body that were not being X-rayed. In 1902 Rollins wrote, almost despairingly, that his warnings about the dangers involved in careless use of X-rays were not being heeded by industry or by his colleagues. By this time Rollins had proven that
X-rays could kill animals, cause a pregnant guinea pig to
abort, and kill a fetus. He also stressed that "animals
vary in susceptibility to the external action of X-light" and warned that these
differences should be considered when patients were
treated by means of X-rays. Rollins' findings eventually became standard practice, and he has been dubbed the "father of radiation protection". He was a member of the
Radiological Society of North America, and its first treasurer. ==Publications and patents==