Don’t Be So Quick to Raise the White Flag on the Nuclear Medicine Advanced Associate as a Career Path
Vicki LaRue
{"title":"Don’t Be So Quick to Raise the White Flag on the Nuclear Medicine Advanced Associate as a Career Path","authors":"Vicki LaRue","doi":"10.2967/jnmt.115.168302","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"What is the true difference between a nuclear medicine technologist and a nuclear medicine advanced associate (NMAA)? There can be many answers to this question: a specialized advanced degree; a broader scope of practice; about $40,000 in debt; a long, uphill battle. It appears that many believe the future of the NMAA to be ill-fated and that if technologists truly want to increase their clinical knowledge and position, they should follow the route of a conventional physician assistant (PA). PAs can bill for services and are recognized by state legislators, physicians, and medical institutions. NMAAs cannot bill for services, must prove their worth to institutions (most of which do not have job descriptions or openings for NMAAs), and currently have no certification in states that require imaging professionals to obtain valid licenses. Make no mistake: this pathway is not easy, but as several practicing NMAAs can attest, it can definitely be successful. Having a conventional PA license would not prepare someone to act as a potential extender for the nuclear medicine physician. Though PAs have been used in diagnostic radiology, it is rare or impossible to find a PAwith clinical training in nuclear medicine. We do not see PAs in the interpretation room dictating ventilation–perfusion results or calculating therapy doses. The reason is multifold. To be a valuable resource in the nuclear medicine department, one must be trained as a physician extender in this specific modality. Current NMAAs have responsibilities such as making technical and clinical decisions, which requires a strong technical background; administering adjunctive medications, which requires knowledge not only of pharmacology but also of the specific imaging procedure and the physiologic response being assessed; evaluating patients and obtaining information specific for nuclear medicine procedures; and interpreting the preliminary results of molecular imaging procedures. Most of these duties are not taught in conventional PA classes. Even a seasoned nuclear medicine technologist who has completed a conventional PA program would not be prepared to function as a physician extender in nuclear medicine, as a large part of the NMAA’s role—image interpretation—is not addressed by current PA curriculums. As an example, 5 areas of study for an NMAA clinical internship might include pulmonary, endocrine, and skeletal medicine; therapeutic and PET imaging procedures; gastrointestinal, genitourinary, and neuroimaging procedures; cardiac imaging and stress testing; and administrative procedures and specialized modalities. The curriculum would have strict requirements for each of these areas. For a PA clinical internship, in contrast, the corresponding 5 areas might include emergency medicine and internal medicine procedures; pediatrics and surgery; primary care and obstetrics and gynecology; psychiatry and geriatrics; and critical care and elective courses. The NMAA program is not designed for advanced technical education but, rather, uses training methods similar to those for radiology residents. Students sit with physician preceptors to gain knowledge and interpretation skills for each type of molecular imaging; they interpret preliminary findings before their preceptor performs the final interpretation. This is how imaging professionals are trained, and the NMAA is no different. But beyond just image interpretation, NMAAs are also taught physical assessment. They perform physical examinations on patients just as a PA does, are instructed in pathophysiology to give a differential diagnosis just as a PA is, are skilled in pharmacology just as a PA is, and just as PAs must demonstrate a certain level of expertise in a specific area (e.g., surgery, gynecology, or geriatrics), NMAAs must demonstrate a certain level of expertise in the specific area of molecular imaging. Thus, training in the conventional PA curriculum would not prepare the physician extender to perform adequately in the nuclear medicine department. Technologists who would like to go into advanced practice in molecular imaging should consider several differences between PA and NMAA positions. The PA position is more clinically patient-based than the NMAA position, as evidenced by the clinical requirements of PA programs. However, because a degree of patient assessment is definitely necessary in molecular imaging, physical assessment training is mandatory for the NMAA even though its scope may be less than that for the PA. By Received Oct. 16, 2015; revision accepted Dec. 28, 2015. For correspondence or reprints contact: Vicki LaRue, National Jewish Health, 400 Jackson St., Denver, CO 80206. E-mail: laruev@njhealth.org Published online Jan. 14, 2016. COPYRIGHT © 2016 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Inc. 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引用次数: 0
Abstract
What is the true difference between a nuclear medicine technologist and a nuclear medicine advanced associate (NMAA)? There can be many answers to this question: a specialized advanced degree; a broader scope of practice; about $40,000 in debt; a long, uphill battle. It appears that many believe the future of the NMAA to be ill-fated and that if technologists truly want to increase their clinical knowledge and position, they should follow the route of a conventional physician assistant (PA). PAs can bill for services and are recognized by state legislators, physicians, and medical institutions. NMAAs cannot bill for services, must prove their worth to institutions (most of which do not have job descriptions or openings for NMAAs), and currently have no certification in states that require imaging professionals to obtain valid licenses. Make no mistake: this pathway is not easy, but as several practicing NMAAs can attest, it can definitely be successful. Having a conventional PA license would not prepare someone to act as a potential extender for the nuclear medicine physician. Though PAs have been used in diagnostic radiology, it is rare or impossible to find a PAwith clinical training in nuclear medicine. We do not see PAs in the interpretation room dictating ventilation–perfusion results or calculating therapy doses. The reason is multifold. To be a valuable resource in the nuclear medicine department, one must be trained as a physician extender in this specific modality. Current NMAAs have responsibilities such as making technical and clinical decisions, which requires a strong technical background; administering adjunctive medications, which requires knowledge not only of pharmacology but also of the specific imaging procedure and the physiologic response being assessed; evaluating patients and obtaining information specific for nuclear medicine procedures; and interpreting the preliminary results of molecular imaging procedures. Most of these duties are not taught in conventional PA classes. Even a seasoned nuclear medicine technologist who has completed a conventional PA program would not be prepared to function as a physician extender in nuclear medicine, as a large part of the NMAA’s role—image interpretation—is not addressed by current PA curriculums. As an example, 5 areas of study for an NMAA clinical internship might include pulmonary, endocrine, and skeletal medicine; therapeutic and PET imaging procedures; gastrointestinal, genitourinary, and neuroimaging procedures; cardiac imaging and stress testing; and administrative procedures and specialized modalities. The curriculum would have strict requirements for each of these areas. For a PA clinical internship, in contrast, the corresponding 5 areas might include emergency medicine and internal medicine procedures; pediatrics and surgery; primary care and obstetrics and gynecology; psychiatry and geriatrics; and critical care and elective courses. The NMAA program is not designed for advanced technical education but, rather, uses training methods similar to those for radiology residents. Students sit with physician preceptors to gain knowledge and interpretation skills for each type of molecular imaging; they interpret preliminary findings before their preceptor performs the final interpretation. This is how imaging professionals are trained, and the NMAA is no different. But beyond just image interpretation, NMAAs are also taught physical assessment. They perform physical examinations on patients just as a PA does, are instructed in pathophysiology to give a differential diagnosis just as a PA is, are skilled in pharmacology just as a PA is, and just as PAs must demonstrate a certain level of expertise in a specific area (e.g., surgery, gynecology, or geriatrics), NMAAs must demonstrate a certain level of expertise in the specific area of molecular imaging. Thus, training in the conventional PA curriculum would not prepare the physician extender to perform adequately in the nuclear medicine department. Technologists who would like to go into advanced practice in molecular imaging should consider several differences between PA and NMAA positions. The PA position is more clinically patient-based than the NMAA position, as evidenced by the clinical requirements of PA programs. However, because a degree of patient assessment is definitely necessary in molecular imaging, physical assessment training is mandatory for the NMAA even though its scope may be less than that for the PA. By Received Oct. 16, 2015; revision accepted Dec. 28, 2015. For correspondence or reprints contact: Vicki LaRue, National Jewish Health, 400 Jackson St., Denver, CO 80206. E-mail: laruev@njhealth.org Published online Jan. 14, 2016. COPYRIGHT © 2016 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, Inc. DOI: 10.2967/jnmt.115.168302
不要这么快就把核医学高级助理作为职业道路的白旗
核医学技术专家和核医学高级助理(NMAA)之间的真正区别是什么?这个问题可以有很多答案:一个专门的高级学位;更广泛的实践范围;负债约4万美元;一场漫长而艰苦的战斗。似乎许多人认为NMAA的未来是命运多舛的,如果技术人员真的想增加他们的临床知识和地位,他们应该走传统的医师助理(PA)的道路。私人助理可以为服务开具账单,并得到州议员、医生和医疗机构的认可。NMAAs不能为服务收费,必须向机构证明他们的价值(大多数机构没有NMAAs的职位描述或空缺),目前在要求成像专业人员获得有效执照的州没有认证。毫无疑问:这条路并不容易,但正如几位执业的NMAAs所证明的那样,它绝对可以成功。拥有传统的PA执照并不能使某人成为核医学医师的潜在扩展者。虽然助理医师已用于诊断放射学,但很少或不可能找到具有核医学临床培训的助理医师。我们没有看到口译室的医务人员口述通气灌注结果或计算治疗剂量。原因是多方面的。要成为核医学部门的宝贵资源,一个人必须接受培训,成为这一特定模式的医师扩展者。目前NMAAs的职责包括做出技术和临床决策,这需要强大的技术背景;管理辅助药物,这不仅需要药理学知识,还需要特定的成像程序和正在评估的生理反应的知识;评估患者并获取核医学程序专用信息;并解释分子成像程序的初步结果。在传统的私人助理课程中,大多数这些职责都不会被教授。即使是一个经验丰富的核医学技术专家,他已经完成了传统的私人助理课程,也不会准备好作为核医学的医师扩展者,因为NMAA的大部分角色——图像解释——并没有在当前的私人助理课程中得到解决。例如,NMAA临床实习的5个研究领域可能包括肺、内分泌和骨骼医学;治疗和PET成像程序;胃肠道、泌尿生殖系统和神经影像学检查;心脏成像和压力测试;以及行政程序和专业化方式。课程对这些领域都有严格的要求。相比之下,对于PA临床实习,相应的领域可能包括急诊医学和内科程序;儿科和外科;初级保健和妇产科;精神病学和老年病学;以及重症监护和选修课程。NMAA项目不是为高级技术教育而设计的,而是使用类似于放射科住院医生的培训方法。学生们与医生老师坐在一起,学习各种分子成像的知识和解释技能;他们在导师进行最终解释之前解释初步发现。这就是成像专业人员接受培训的方式,NMAA也不例外。但除了图像解读,nmaa还学习身体评估。他们像助理医生一样对病人进行身体检查,像助理医生一样接受病理生理学指导,给出鉴别诊断,像助理医生一样精通药理学,就像助理医生一样必须在特定领域(如外科、妇科或老年医学)展示一定水平的专业知识一样,NMAAs必须在分子成像的特定领域展示一定水平的专业知识。因此,传统PA课程的培训不能使医师扩展员在核医学部门充分发挥作用。想要进入分子成像高级实践的技术人员应该考虑PA和NMAA职位之间的几个差异。PA职位比NMAA职位更以临床患者为基础,PA项目的临床要求证明了这一点。然而,由于一定程度的患者评估在分子成像中是绝对必要的,因此NMAA的身体评估培训是强制性的,即使其范围可能小于PA。2015年10月16日收到;2015年12月28日接受修改。联系:Vicki LaRue, National Jewish Health, 400 Jackson St., Denver, CO 80206。e-mail:laruev@njhealth.org 2016年1月14日发布。版权所有©2016核医学与分子成像学会。DOI: 10.2967 / jnmt.115.168302
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