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Radiology
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Radiology is the branch of medicine concerned with using imaging technologies to diagnose and treat disease. It sits at the intersection of clinical practice, physics, and technology, making it a subject studied across health sciences, radiologic technology programs, and medical education courses. The field draws academic interest because it continuously evolves alongside advances in imaging methods, patient care standards, and ethical practice, requiring students to understand both the technical and human dimensions of diagnosis and medicine.

Student papers on this topic approach radiology from several distinct angles. Some focus on patient-centered concerns, examining how to reduce patient exposure to radiation while maintaining image quality, or analyzing the psychological and physical capabilities of patients undergoing imaging procedures. Others take a historical and forward-looking perspective, tracing how the field has developed from its origins to its current state and projecting future directions. Technology and professional practice are also common frameworks, with papers covering radiologic technology, radiation safety, teleradiography, and the relationship between anesthesiology and radiology. Ethics and personal motivation, including reflective accounts of becoming a radiographer, round out the range of approaches.

A strong essay on radiology benefits from a focused thesis that connects a specific aspect of the field — safety protocols, imaging technology, patient care, or professional ethics — to a broader argument about medicine or diagnosis. Evidence drawn from clinical guidelines, professional standards, or documented technological developments carries the most weight. A common pitfall is treating radiology as purely technical; the strongest papers consistently tie imaging methods and equipment back to real consequences for patient outcomes and professional responsibility.

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Paper Doctorate
Stark Law Compliance for Group Medical Practices
The Stark Laws are three separate provisions that govern physician self-referral for Medicare and Medicaid patients, named after U.S. Congressman Pete Stark who first sponsored the legislation in the early 1990s.
Research Paper Doctorate
Telemedicine and healthcare quality improvement through remote para-professionals
The basic purpose of this study is to discuss whether telemedicine will improve the quality of health care and it's delivery for remotely located advanced health care para-professionals.
Essay Doctorate
Information systems and documentation practices in hospital settings
current hospital setting has only a basic information system in place, which performs many of the functions common to the most basic information systems in such areas as patient registration, certain aspects of patient billing, and medical records indexing and accessing (Kelker, 2010). Portions of other system administration functions are also included in the information system being used at the hospital, such as the logging and tracking of staff in leadership positions, however this is one of the only more "advanced" functions of the largely outdated information system. Many of the more specialized and sophisticated functions more recent information systems can include, such as ambulance tracking and communication, digital communication with the in-hospital
Paper Doctorate
Transfer to \'Dhobiwalla? What\'s That?\" I Asked.
¶ … transfer to 'Dhobiwalla? What's that?" I asked.
Paper Undergraduate
Healthcare Information Management Systems Why
Resistance to change is by far the most costly and commonly cited reason for all systems within a hospital to not attain their fullest potential. The lack of adoption for patient-centric management systems can be attributed to resistance to change and fear of what the new systems will do to re-align or change job priorities and status (Tan, Payton, 2010). Health Information Management Systems (HIMS) are often rejected due to these factors and those the systems are designed to support and streamline the work of often minimize their use and make them over time, less valuable from a data use and analysis standpoint. There are many allegories between patient-centric management systems and Customer Relationship Management (CRM) systems throughout manufacturing and services companies. CRM systems typically experience a 70% failure rate due to resistance to change (Foss, Stone, Ekinci, 2008). When a new CRM system is deployed it is common for the sales, marketing and even executive management teams to openly question tis value and see it as more of an intrusion than a tool for getting more work done (Foss, Stone, Ekinci, 2008). In many respects, nurses, physicians and the staffs of clinics are also exhibiting the same rejection of new systems by not allowing them to change their jobs, even if there is the potential to increase their performance as a result (Tan, Payton, 2010). As any new change to how information is used in a healthcare organization will also bring a change in status, every person who relies on the information included is clearly cautious (Hickman, Smaltz, 2008). This is why change management programs and initiatives are critically important in any new HIMS and patient management system being implemented in a healthcare facility. Showing how the system will save time and actually make the workers more effective is the key to making a change management program highly effective.
Essay Doctorate
Fracture mechanisms and characteristics
A fracture is a broken bone or a break of any size on the bone (Giza 2009, Vorvick 2009, Parmet 2010). The cause is the application or exertion of physical force, which is stronger than the bone itself.
Research Paper Doctorate
Radiology the History of Ultrasound
The history of ultrasound technology is a long and interesting one. It seems counterintuitive to learn that the technology we have today to diagnose life-threatening diseases as well as to diagnose prenatal issues, and…
Essay Doctorate
EHR Training Development Plan for Hospital Staff
The project provides the training plan for the EHR (electronic health record)that St Joseph hospital has recently launched. The training plan will take approximately 6 months to complete, and St Joseph Hospital will be able to eliminate medical errors associated with healthcare practice which will assist the organization to deliver a quality healthcare service.
Thesis Undergraduate
Ethical and legal perspectives in the first half
Mr. Lee was an 82 year old male who had been admitted to the hospital after he suffered from stroke. He was brought to the hospital by his son and only legal heir and guardian. Since Mr. Lee was not in his usual state of health and was in a comatose state, the doctors and nurses reckoned that to fulfill his nutritional requirements, he needs a gastro-tubing for feeding. Every now and then Mr. Lee was seen in discomfort because of the tubing; however this was totally normal since most patients do feel uncomfortable with the tubing.
Research Paper Undergraduate
The Two Fields of Radiology and Anesthesiology
Two of the fields I am most interested in are anesthesiology and radiology. Each is attractive to me in its own way, and I look forward to being granted the opportunity to develop an expertise in one of them.