Title
LSR1290 - Radiographic Clinical II
Description
Description
This course provides students with opportunities to get hands-on experience in a variety of clinical settings. Students work under the direct supervision of a registered radiologic technologist and practice radiographic positioning and equipment manipulation to achieve diagnostic-quality images. The focus of this clinical experience is to obtain and pursue competence in radiographic exams of the pelvis, abdomen, skull, paranasal sinuses and facial bones.
API ID
Credits
5 (0/0/5)
Prerequisites
Competencies
- Demonstrate competence in imaging procedures by meeting the requirements for limited scope radiographers as outlined by the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists (ARRT).
- Use professional communication with instructors, peers and members of the healthcare team.
- Execute medical imaging procedures under the appropriate level of supervision.
- Adapt to changes and varying clinical situations.
- Provide patient-centered, clinically effective care for all patients regardless of age, gender, disability, special needs, ethnicity or culture.
- Demonstrate competent patient assessment skills.
- Respond appropriately to medical emergencies.
- Adapt procedures to meet age-specific, disease-specific and cultural needs of patients.
- Assess the patient and record clinical history.
- Apply standard and transmission-based precautions.
- Demonstrate competency in the principles of radiation protection standards.
- Demonstrate safe, ethical and legal practices.
- Examine procedure orders and make inquiries when they seem to lack accuracy.
- Maintain patient confidentiality standards and meet Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) requirements.
- Demonstrate the principles of transferring, positioning and immobilizing patients.
- Adhere to national, institutional and departmental standards, policies and procedures regarding care of patients, providing radiologic procedures and reducing medical errors.
- Select technical factors to produce quality diagnostic images with the lowest possible radiation exposure.
- Critique images for appropriate anatomy, image quality and patient identification, and determine corrective measures to improve suboptimal images.
- Exercise the priorities required in daily clinical practice.
- Demonstrate the ability to think critically and use independent judgment when presented with challenges.
- Work with increasing independence while still adhering to supervision requirements.