Professional/Short course Reporting Skills in Nuclear Medicine

Entry year
2024/25
Course code
UZYSRM15M
Application
University
Level
Professional/Short Course
School
School of Health and Social Wellbeing
Campus
Glenside
Delivery
Distance-based online learning
Course Director
Hannah Chandler

15 credit level 7 module

Page last updated 12 October 2023

Introduction

The 15 credit Reporting Skills in Nuclear Medicine module will cover Applied Anatomy, Nuclear Medicine Reporting and The Development of a Nuclear Medicine Report.

The following areas will also form an integral part of the level 7 (Masters level) module delivery:

  • Moral rules: Ethical principles and philosophical approaches related to image interpretation
  • The rights and duties of healthcare professionals
  • The contractual obligations of professional practitioners including negligence and general legal principles
  • Informed consent and the importance of confidentiality
  • Service enhancement and current clinical legislation/governance
  • Service re-design, innovation and professional role development
  • Approaches to decision making in professional practice

The 'Prices and Dates' tab will give you all the information you need on how to apply for this course.

Entry requirements

You must have relevant Nuclear Medicine experience.

Structure

Content

The module syllabus will typically include:

Applied Anatomy

Applied anatomy, physiology and pathological processes will be introduced for a number of human body systems

Nuclear Medicine Reporting

The following headings will be used to discuss the distribution and appearance of radioactive tracers used across a range of common Nuclear Medicine procedures:

  • Normal patterns of uptake, distribution and excretion
  • Common normal variants
  • Appearance of common pathologies
  • Artefacts commonly encountered
  • Relevance to patient"s management / treatment

Functional and anatomical image appearances within the hybrid-imaging environment (SPECT/CT only) will also be discussed.

The Development of a Nuclear Medicine Report

Reporting terminology and the construction of a report will be considered in line with current professional guidance

Additional Syllabus Content

The following areas will also form an integral part of the module delivery:

  • Moral rules: ethical principles and philosophical approaches related to image interpretation
  • The rights and duties of healthcare professionals.
  • The contractual obligations of professional practitioners including negligence and general legal principles
  • Informed consent and the importance of confidentiality
  • Service enhancement and current clinical legislation / governance
  • Service re-design, innovation and professional role development
  • Approaches to decision making in professional practice

On successful completion of this module, students will be able to:

  • Apply relevant theoretical and practical knowledge of Nuclear Medicine to the reporting of images, demonstrating an ability to detect and describe normal and common pathological conditions encountered in routine clinical practice
  • Critically evaluate image quality in relation to potential imaging artefacts
  • Develop the clinical skills of the practitioner thus enabling description, discussion and evaluation of radionuclide imaging procedures
  • Demonstrate a critical understanding of various imaging protocols related to Nuclear Medicine and consider how these might affect overall image quality
  • Critically evaluate the implementation and provision of a Non-medical Nuclear Medicine reporting service.
  • Demonstrate a critical understanding of service efficiency and clinical audit mechanisms whilst demonstrating an awareness of current legislation / clinical governance
  • Critically evaluate contemporary practice in nuclear medicine and other related imaging modalities in order to inform decision making processes
  • Critically evaluate the role of the reporting nuclear medicine practitioner within the context of an interprofessional environment
  • Utilise a formulated technical reporting framework, whilst demonstrating appreciation for the moral and ethical aspects of patient care and their subsequent treatment

Learning and Teaching

The learning and teaching strategy for this module has been developed to provide students with the opportunity to analyse the current status of Nuclear Medicine reporting services and to consider a number of developmental opportunities that exist within this field for the Nuclear Medicine Practitioner

Awareness of current protocols and an appreciation of common Nuclear Medicine appearances will enable the Nuclear Medicine practitioner to develop a reporting portfolio that demonstrates clinical proficiency. In line with the requirements of this type of practitioner the module will also consider decision making skills, the development of a robust reporting framework, the importance of clinical audit and current issues associated with legislation/negligence.

To ensure engagement throughout the module students will be required to contribute to discussion boards where specific tasks will be set. These tasks will be constructed to help the students meet with the learning outcomes of the module. Contributions to these tasks will form source material from which students may extract content to add to their portfolio/written assignment. Experience from other modules using this format indicates the potential for valuable discussion relating to the module content and helps ensure timely engagement as opposed to leaving personal study and revision to the end of the module delivery. The capacity to engage in debate with peers helps to facilitate networking, peer/shared learning and knowledge exchange.

A variety of teaching approaches will be utilised within the module.

Scheduled learning will include approximately 30 hours engaged with online lectures, seminars, tutorials, discussion board entries and article critique. 

Independent learning will include upto 120 hours engaged with essential reading, portfolio preparation and construction, assignment construction and personal reflection on learning

Additional student centred learning guided by tutorials and discussion will include:

  • Evaluation and discussion of current working practices
  • Consideration as to the future role of the Nuclear Medicine Practitioner

Work-Based Learning

Students will be required to complete approximately twenty five percent of the portfolio cases within "supervised reporting sessions" and time to undertake this should be discussed with the clinical mentor/departmental management prior to the commencement of the module.

Assessment

A reporting portfolio and a 1,500 word written assignment will be used to assess the achievement of the learning outcomes.

Features

Study facilities

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Prices and dates

Supplementary fee information

Please visit full fee information to see the price brackets for our modules.

Funding may be available to support your learning. Please contact your Trust Education Lead. If you work in the Private, Independent and Voluntary Sector, please contact your employer who will advise you.

Dates

Please click on the Apply Now button to view dates.

How to apply

How to apply

Please click on the Apply Now button to apply for your CPD module, which you can take as a stand-alone course or as part of an undergraduate or postgraduate (Masters level) programme.

Extra information

If the course you are applying for is fully online or blended learning, please note that you are expected to provide your own headsets/microphones.

For further information