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Volume 6, Issue 5 (Suppl)

OMICS J Radiol, an open access journal

ISSN: 2167-7964

Radiology and Oncology 2017

October 19-20, 2017

World Congress on

October 19-20, 2017 | New York, USA

Radiology and Oncology

Changing job composition for New York radiologic technology graduates due to growth of outpatient and

urgent care centers and reduction in academic and complex hospital-based jobs

Jaclyn Mina

and

Subhendra Sarkar

New York City College of Technology, USA

T

his work interviewed randomly selected Radiologic Technology (RT) graduates from New York to explore their job search

experience. Approximately 1/3 found hospital based and the rest found outpatient or traveling technologist jobs as their first

job. Currently, among 197,000 RT jobs nationally New York metropolis holds 14,000 positions with annual projected growth rate

2.4% or 400 RT’s annually for next 3 years while nationally projected annual RT job growth is 1%. In spite of higher growth rate at

present, busy areas like New York city nationally afford only 1.5 RT’s/1000 jobs while rural areas offer 2-2.5 RT jobs/1000 jobs. In

busy metropolises in USA, many facilities are expanding such as urgent cares and out-patient. There is a strong trend of a higher

proportion of demand in outpatient diagnostic clinics and urgent care centers compared to hospital based RT jobs. Non-hospital

based jobs often require multiple tasks including scheduling, billing, customer service, marketing etc. in addition to administering the

diagnostic tests. However, without acute care and academic radiology experience, a large fraction of radiologic technology graduates

today may lose their skill set and grow into a relatively unsophisticated radiology worker schedule with no ICU, psychiatry or tertiary

radiologic responsibilities and miss out on cutting-edge diagnostic technology or radiology research.

Biography

Jaclyn Mina has completed her AAS in Radiologic Technology from New York City College of Technology. She is currently a BS Student in Radiologic Science and has

been working in Radiology Economics for a year in Undergraduate research. She also holds a Radiographer job at Pro Health Circle Urgent Care at Staten Island, NY.

jmina24@yahoo.com

Jaclyn Mina et al., OMICS J Radiol 2017, 6:5 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2167-7964-C1-016