School of Diagnostic Imaging
Nuclear Medicine Program
The Curriculum
The program consists of 12 months of clinical
practice and classroom instruction with a team of
faculty and adjunct faculty consisting of radiologists, physicists, medical physics technologists and nuclear medicine technologists. Academic instruction includes but is not limited to:
- Basic and technical math and statistics
- Radioassay
- Anatomy and physiology
- Pathology
- Nuclear physics
- Nuclear medicine instrumentation
- Radiopharmacy and radiochemistry
- Radiation safety and protection
- Radiation biology
- Patient care and safety
- Computer applications
- Medical terminology
- Medical ethics
- Administration and management
- Positron Emission Tomography (PET/CT)
- Immunology as related to nuclear medicine
- Quality control and quality assurance
All clinical practice sessions take place at Rhode Island Hospital. Students will be working in the hospital with physicians, radiology professionals and other members of the health care team. The department of nuclear medicine is equipped with the latest technology, such as counters, gamma cameras, PET/CT and SPECT/CT scanners.
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