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Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology

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Insights About Nuclear Medicine Technology: Findings from a 2006 Survey of NMT Education Program Directors

Jennifer L. Prekeges
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology March 2008, 36 (1) 55; DOI: https://doi.org/10.2967/jnmt.107.042689
Jennifer L. Prekeges
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TO THE EDITOR: I must register my protest against the article “Insights about Nuclear Medicine Technology: Findings from a 2006 Survey of NMT Education Program Directors” by the Center for Health Workforce Studies at the State University of New York at Rensselaer (1). I believe this article should have been published as 2 separate articles: the data from the survey and the recommendations. It is the latter with which I take issue.

The recommendations produced by the (unidentified) authors of this paper do not in my opinion follow from the survey results. The first paragraph of the recommendations states that they arise from “the open-ended comments presented in Appendix B, supplemented by conversations with practitioners and leaders in the NMT profession.” There is no Appendix B included in the print version of the paper, nor is it available as advertised on the SNM Web site. I believe that only the very last part of the authors' statement is true, and the recommendations are those of the SNM Technologist Section (SNMTS) leadership. I believe they have been disguised as resulting from survey data when in reality the survey itself did not directly address many of the recommendations that the article makes.

I will provide 2 examples of the disconnect between survey and recommendations. The first falls under the first recommendation bullet, which states that the correct entry-level credential for nuclear medicine technologists should be a bachelor's degree. This is a position that has been promoted by SNMTS leadership for several years. However, the responses to the survey question are easy to predict. Bachelor-degree program directors are of course in favor of requiring a bachelor's degree as the entry-level credential. But the question by its very nature will be answered negatively by associate-degree program directors, whose livelihoods are directly challenged by its asking. The recommendation does not capture the diversity of opinion among program directors but simply voices the SNMTS leadership position.

The second example relates to education in sectional anatomy. The survey question asked if a program currently offers instruction in sectional anatomy, not whether we thought it should be included. In actuality, many program directors are actively working to add sectional anatomy to their programs but are deemed “complacent” because they have not already done so.

As a program director who completed the survey, I am concerned that the recommendations will be interpreted as the “voice” of the program directors, when the recommendations really address concerns and biases of the SNMTS leadership. I feel that the recommendations make program directors appear uninterested in advances within their profession, when in fact the survey instrument asked only what the directors are currently doing. And I am most distressed that the JNMT would publish what I consider to be an opinion piece under the guise of survey results.

Footnotes

  • COPYRIGHT © 2008 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine, Inc.

References

  1. 1.↵
    Insights about nuclear medicine technology: findings from a 2006 survey of NMT education program directors. J Nucl Med Technol. 2007;35:42–49.
    OpenUrlAbstract/FREE Full Text
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Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology: 36 (1)
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology
Vol. 36, Issue 1
March 2008
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Insights About Nuclear Medicine Technology: Findings from a 2006 Survey of NMT Education Program Directors
Jennifer L. Prekeges
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology Mar 2008, 36 (1) 55; DOI: 10.2967/jnmt.107.042689

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Insights About Nuclear Medicine Technology: Findings from a 2006 Survey of NMT Education Program Directors
Jennifer L. Prekeges
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology Mar 2008, 36 (1) 55; DOI: 10.2967/jnmt.107.042689
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