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Radiologic Technologists (RTs) are highly trained professionals with a broad
scope of imaging skills who are in high demand across the US healthcare
spectrum. Unfortunately, the supply of these professionals is significantly
below the demand for their sophisticated array of skills – a situation that was
further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
There is a solution to this problem that preserves patient safety and care
quality, improves patient compliance and outcomes, keeps overall healthcare
costs low, and ensures Radiologic Technologists can utilize their full scope of
expertise in the areas where that expertise is most needed. That solution is
Limited Scope X-ray Licensure.
Radiologic Technologists (RTs) are highly trained professionals with a broad
scope of imaging skills who are in high demand across the US healthcare
spectrum. Unfortunately, the supply of these professionals is significantly
below the demand for their sophisticated array of skills – a situation that was
further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Prior to the pandemic a 2019 survey by the American Society of Radiologic
Technologists (ASRT) revealed that radiology departments were 8.5%
understaffed with radiographers. The Bureau of Labor and Statistics has
recently outlined at least a 6% growth in demand – approximately 17,000
positions annually – that will merely compound the existing shortage.
This shortage is severely affecting smaller and more independent practices.
Whereas large hospital or specialty organizations are able to offer inflated
levels of compensation to ensure their imaging departments remain staffed,
smaller healthcare providers cannot compete with these wages and are
running out of solutions beyond that of curtailing or eliminating their
radiology services and redirecting patients to additional sites (often with
higher costs of care), and adding financial burden onto the entire healthcare
system – and potentially forcing a compromise of patient care.
There is a solution to this problem that preserves patient safety and care
quality, improves patient compliance and outcomes, keeps overall healthcare
costs low, and ensures Radiologic Technologists can utilize their full scope of
expertise in the areas where that expertise is most needed. That solution is
Limited Scope X-ray Licensure.
Many states have already implemented Limited Scope licensure. Others allow
for it, but make it nearly unachievable, and many states have no solution at all.
This paper advocates for Limited Scope x-ray licensure in those states where
regulations do not allow for it or the requirements make Limited Scope
licensure effectively unobtainable
Format | White Paper |
---|---|
Source | Urgent Care Association |
Contributor | Lou Ellen Horwitz, Christopher Nugent |
Publication Date | 12/21/2022 |
Length | 15 minutes |
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