A Modest Proposal

6/15/2008 - Father's Day

I would like to propose to the powers that be, a new competency requirement for aspiring radiologic technologists during their course of study. Since I have completed this competency many times during my clinical experiences, I also want to be the first student to claim proficiency in this procedure. The title of this master competency will be Babysitting.

I wish I had a dollar for every time I have been involved in an exam where a mother or father showed up with ‘extra’ kids. As we all know, we don’t want anyone in the exam room that doesn’t have to be there for obvious reasons, especially in the case of children. At my clinical site on Tuesday, a mother brought in her one-month old son for a cystogram. We usually put a lead apron on the mother and let her stay in the room and assist whenever possible. This particular mother also brought her four-year old son along for the ride. I knew, as soon as I saw the situation, that I would not be assisting in the study in any capacity greater than sitting in the hallway with the four-year old.

In order to complete this competency, the student must show proficiency in the following:

1. Establish communications with the child by getting on your knees and introducing yourself at eye level.

2. Explain to the mother that you want to stay with her child somewhere outside of the examination room.

3. Successfully separate the child from his mother with minimal kicking and screaming (the child’s kicking and screaming should also be minimal).

4. Provide adequate entertainment for the child during his absence from his mother by finding something interesting for him to play with. (Items should not include enema tips, rubber gloves, empty contrast bottles, needles, lead markers, dosimiters, or any other items that could induce death in a small child.)

5. Allow the child to step all over your pristine white shoes without complaint.

6. Keep the child from wandering into any mammography exams.

7. When the mother returns, comfort her by telling her how much fun you had during your babysitting experience.

This comp isn’t as easy as it seems :)

Paranasal Sinuses and HIV

CVIC - Hank and Melvin

Hank and Melvin hard at work…

I had another good day at clinical today. I logged another 14 procedures, which takes my total for the semester up to 230. I need 10 more procedures to get the maximum grade on that section of this class, so I might get that completed tomorrow. If not tomorrow, Tuesday for sure.

I got my required pre-comp for the paranasal sinuses today. I was drooling over that order when it rolled off the printer. Its the first time I have seen one, so I needed to do it. The routine at this clinical site for the paranasal sinuses is a Waters, PA, Lateral, and Submentovertex. I knocked each of these out without any problems. I have had the opportunity to shoot the first three of these positions in the past, but today was the first time I was able to try the SMV. My SMV wasn’t 100% perfect though, but it was very close. If you are familiar with this position, you know it can be hard for the patient to hold. I’m confident that my positioning was correct because I double-checked it under supervision before I shot the image. I think my patient moved just slightly before the tube fired. What we needed to see was clearly visible on the image though, so it was successful.

Another interesting part of my day involved my first interaction with a known HIV/AIDS patient. The concept is a bit unnerving in the beginning, but after everything was said and done, it was just another exam. I didn’t do anything any differently than I would with any other patient.

Trodding on Through

6/21/2008 - My Orchid

Clinical is still going very well this summer. We have about three weeks left in this semester. The only thing that bothers me about this semester is that I haven’t collected a lot of master comps. I have met the requirement for the maximum grade because I had extras from last semester that have carried over, but I have only gotten 6 comps during this summer semester so far. I expect to get 3 more at least, but I would really like to have gotten several more during this term. I’m going to miss this clinical site when I’m gone though. I really enjoy working at this one.

We’ll be welcoming in the new class of students next week. The class of 2010 has been selected and they will have their orientation day at the school next week. Like the class that greeted us when we started, we will be putting together a small goody-bag of stuff for each of the new students. I believe the new incoming class only has 8 students instead of 10 this year. I’m not 100% sure of the reasoning behind that, but I believe that it has to do with the current saturation of the job market for radiographers in this area.

I am in the process of re-working the My Goals page of this website. At this point in the program, I think I need to focus on the comps that I don’t have rather than the ones that I do have. I need 11 more of the 36 required comps and I need 6 more of the required 15 electives. 17 more comps doesn’t sound like a lot, but it really is at this point in the program. In reality, I will need a lot more than that to get the grades I want. I’ll need a total of 26 more comps to get the maximum grade, but I only need 17 to meet the minimum requirement for graduation. I should get to that point without much trouble…

Small Bowel Record

Me and Conrad

This is a holiday week, so my only clinical day was on Tuesday since I’m out of class on Thursday and Friday. Tuesday was a rather busy day though. I managed to comp the small bowel study, and in the process, I set my personal best time on that exam. On my first pre-comp of this exam, the patient took nearly three hours to move the barium all the way to the terminal ileum. My second patient was a bit quicker at just over one hour. The patient I had on Tuesday got it all the way through in about 10 minutes. The barium had reached the terminal ileum on my film at 10 minutes, but I still had to shoot the second film since the radiologist needs the AP and PA images to work with.

I also got my final pre-comp on the ribs exam. The next time I see a ribs exam, I’ll be able to comp it hopefully.

The cruddy part of my day was that I missed out on a humerus exam when I went to lunch. I still need one pre-comp on the humerus before I can get the procedure comped, and I’m just not lucky enough yet to see many of these exams.

Comp System Rundown

Here’s a quick rundown of how our comp system works… We have a master list that we were given at the beginning of the program that lists the mandatory comps (36 total) and elective comps (30 total). We are required to comp all 36 of the mandatory comps and 15 out of the 30 elective comps. That being the case, there are 51 comps that we are required to have before we graduate. To get the maximum available grade in our clinical class, we ultimately have to get more than this. During our first semester, we were required to get 4 comps to get a grade of 100 on that section of the grade. During the second semester, we were required to get 22 comps to get a grade of 100. During this summer semester, we need 15 comps to get the maximum grade. During the upcoming fall and spring, we need 15 each semester for the maximum grade. The good news is that if you get extra comps during one semester, they carry over to the next semester. The following list shows our required comps and the elective comps. I have completed the comps that are in bold text:

Required Comps - Need all of these

Chest (routine)
AP Chest (wheelchair or stretcher)

Thumb or Finger
Hand
Wrist
Forearm
Elbow

Shoulder
Trauma Upper Extremity (non shoulder)
Foot
Ankle
Knee
Tibia-Fibula
Femur
Trauma Lower Extremity

Cervical Spine
Thoracic Spine
Lumbar Spine
Pelvis
Hip

KUB
Decubitus or Upright Abdomen

C-Arm Procedure
Portable Chest

Portable Orthopedic
Pediatric Chest
Ribs
Humerus
Trauma Shoulder (Scapular Y, Transthoracic, or Axillary)
Skull
Paranasal Sinuses
Trauma (cross table) Cervical Spine
Cross table lateral Hip
Upper GI Series
Barium Enema
Portable Abdomen

Electives - Need 15 of these

Lateral Decubitus Chest
Clavicle
Patella
Calcaneus

ERCP
Pediatric Upper Extremity
Pediatric Lower Extremity

Pediatric Portable
Small Bowel Series
Sternum
Upper Airway (Soft Tissue Neck)
Scapula
AC Joints
Toe
Facial Bones
Orbits
Zygomatic Arches
Nasal Bones
Mandible or Panorex
Sacrum or Coccyx
Scoliosis Series
Sacroiliac Joints
IVU
Esophagus
Cystography / Cystourethrography
Myelography
Arthrography
Surgical Cholangiography
Retrograde Pyelography
Pediatric Abdomen

Anything that isn’t on these lists are something we call “Candy” comps. They are comps that don’t require any pre-comps, and there are lots of them. I have 44 comps completed so far in the program. If you click on the MY GOALS link at the top of the page, you can see the list of stuff I have completed so far… I think I need to make some revisions to that page to help me focus on what I still need rather than what I have already. As far as this summer semester is concerned, I don’t expect to get many more comps. There are three that I expect to complete. I plan to comp the Barium Enema, the Upper GI, and the Swimmer’s C/T Spine. I may be able to get the Esophagus, but that exam is a multi-textured barium swallow, and I don’t see many of those.

The VCUG

I got my first opportunity to work on a voiding cystourethrogram in clinical today. I was glad to get the opportunity, but the experience overall was one of the most difficult I have had so far. The male patient was just under three years old. For those of you who are in your own clinical environment, you know that children this age can be difficult, especially in fluoro exams. We made it through the fluoro portion of the exam without too much trouble, but the real problems set in when we needed to have the child completely void himself for the final empty bladder image. The child’s bladder was definitely full of contrast, but the child refused to empty it for us. The frustrating part of the situation was that the child would tell us that he needed to pee, but when we took him to the restroom and put him on the stool, he always claimed that he couldn’t go. We decided to get him to drink some to help this process along, but the success was not so great. This child drank an entire 20oz Pepsi, and a 20oz Sun Drop, and still would not go. We gave him a 12oz cup of water and got him to go just a little bit after that, but not enough to void the contrast from his bladder. This process of getting him to completely void started at about 10am this morning, and when I had to leave clinical at 2pm, he was still not voided enough for the final image in the series. By this time, the child was visibly tired and just worn out. To me, it looked like he would go to sleep at any minute. I’m not sure how this exam ended, but I’ll find out in the morning. The tech who was working with me during this exam was completely frustrated with the situation, but I had to let him have it back when I had to leave. I’m sure I’ll hear the result first thing in the morning when I go back.

On a good note, this exam does count as a pre-comp for me, and I also picked up a pre-comp I needed for a pediatric abdomen on another exam today…

Physics

6/18/2008 - Jason Brown

We dove into RAD-131 (Physics) today. We had about 6 hours of lecture. This first physics class doesn’t have a lab associated with it, so we’ll be having lecture on Monday and Wednesday for the next 5 weeks from 9am to 4pm with a lunch break in the middle somewhere. The good thing about today’s lecture is that I haven’t seen anything I don’t really know yet. Most of what we covered today was basic math review, units of measurement, and we started into the physics fundamentals segment as well. One advantage that I may have in my favor is that I have had college level general physics in the past. Our instructor mentioned today that nothing we would cover would require any more math than the algebra level. My last physics class used algebra for some stuff but it also dug into trigonometry and calculus as well for a lot of the problems we solved. This stuff can’t be too mathematically complicated if algebra will cover it all. He even told us that we could make a list of formulas that we would need on a 5×7 index card and use it on the tests. That will take a lot of the work out of it, but most of the formulas I looked at today were familiar anyway.

We have our mid-semester clinical conference tomorrow afternoon, so I’ll get to leave clinical a little early. I have all my paperwork in place for that. I took the mid-semester film test online this afternoon and made a 93 on it.

It won’t be too long until we are welcoming in a new set of first-year students. They should have an orientation day sometime in July, and we will get to meet all of them.

Half Way There

6/18/2008 - Digital Lecture

An interesting milestone passed on Friday… Friday marked the half way point in my Radiography program. I hit the 5-week mark in the 10-week summer semester (third semester out of five). Right now, I’m sitting in an empty classroom while everyone else has left for lunch or whatever they want to do. We had a final test in our RAD-122 (Imaging) class this morning and we have a final lab test for that same class at 1pm. My grades look good so far in this class, and I should get an A for the semester unless I totally botch my lab test after lunch. We will come back to class on Wednesday and dive into the RAD-131 class (Physics). I think I am going to enjoy the Physics. I’m good with math and I enjoyed Physics during my first trip through college. This round of Physics won’t be as complicated as general college physics, but it will be more in the realm of practical application.

I don’t have clinical tomorrow. It’s an advising day at the school, so there are no classes or clinical. Some of my classmates will be making up missed clinical time tomorrow, but I’ll be sleeping late and not doing much of anything :)

Spine Comps

6/18/2008 - X-Ray Lab Skeleton

Today was one of the first really productive days I have had in clinical lately. My spinal comps have been slow in coming for various reasons. Maybe I’m just a little too picky, but probably because I haven’t been in any great hurry to get them done. There are plenty of opportunities for them at my current clinical site, so I have just basically been doing them and trying to learn more about them as I go. It’s really amazing at how different the real world is as compared to the lab in school :)

My first exam this morning was a comp opportunity for the cervical spine series, so I decided to attempt it. I haven’t been having any particular difficulty with the cervical spine series with the exception of the odontoid. The odontoid is the only shot in this series I ever miss on the first try. I finally decided to re-read the book section and talk with the techs at my clinical site. I got some good advice on how to get more consistent with this exam, and it seems to have paid off quite well. The last few odontoids I have shot have been near perfect. Patient motion has also been an issue with the odontoid exam. I can position the patient exactly right and they often won’t be able to hold it until I can get to the control panel to make the image. It’s not the easiest position to hold as a patient either.

That first cervical spine exam today was followed by three lumbar exams, so I decided to go ahead and attempt the comp on that as well. On my first attempt, I had a patient with some rather serious scoliosis. It was so bad that I could see pedicles on the AP view, so my first oblique was rather off target. I actually had to get one of the other techs to help me position this patient to get the obliques right. My second patient was actually a perfect patient for a comp. She was average in size, maybe even a little on the small side, so positioning was quite easy.

I got the T-Spine comp a while back, and I got the cervical and lumbar flexion/extension comps last semester, so the only piece I lack on the spinal stuff is the Swimmer’s, but I’ll probalby shoot that one on my next opportunity also.

I’ll spend the rest of the summer semester (next 5 weeks) working on my fluoro comps…

BE Reschedules

6/13/2008 - Hickory Crawdads

At my current clinical site, I am seeing an unusually large number of Barium Enemas being rescheduled because the patient is not properly ‘cleaned out’ for the procedure. I perform quite a few scout x-rays for this exam every week just to have the radiologist reschedule the patient for another day of prep. Some patients come in for the exam and have only been preparing for less than 24 hours, which is rarely enough time for the large intestine to be cleaned out. It also seems that some doctors are not in tune with the nature of the prep procedure. I’m hearing stories from patients where the doctor has told them they could eat certain foods that are not clear liquids. I’m fairly confident that it’s true because multiple patients have told me that this doctor said they could eat cottage cheese, which is certainly not a clear liquid. I can’t really understand why this is happening. It’s a waste of time for the patient and the imaging center…

Small Bowel

6/10/2008 - Hickory Crawdads

I got my first opportunity in clinical on Tuesday to do the small bowel exam. I have to get two pre-comps (one more now) before I can comp this procedure. It’s rather easy to perform, but this was the first one I have seen in this clinical rotation. Hopefully I’ll see some more before the end of the summer. The site was rather slow on Tuesday, so I didn’t get to log but five procedures, but I did miss quite a few procedures while I was doing the small bowel. That exam ran for a little over three hours in total.

We had a rather difficult test in RAD-122 today, and apparently the entire class scored below normal. Our instructor gave us the tests back and told us to take them home, re-write the questions we missed along with the correct answers and an explanation of the answer. When we turn that in on Monday, he will be giving us half credit for the questions we missed. I made an 83 on the test and should end up with a 91.5 after I get credit back, which will be ok. That will put my current average at a 93, so it looks like I’m going to have another course where I’m borderline between the A and B mark. We’ll see how it goes…