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German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen (1845–1923) was experimenting with electrical current when he discovered that a mysterious and invisible "ray" would pass through his flesh but leave an outline of his bones on a screen coated with a metal compound. In 1895, Röntgen made the first durable record of the internal parts of a living human: an "X-ray" image (as it came to be called) of his wife’s hand. Scientists worldwide quickly began their own experiments with...
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Radiologist Hiring Preferences Based on Practice Needs.

Edward I Bluth1, Paul A Larson2, Lawrence A Liebscher3

  • 1Department of Radiology, Ochsner Clinic Foundation, and The University of Queensland School of Medicine, Ochsner Clinical School, New Orleans, Louisiana.

Journal of the American College of Radiology : JACR
|August 29, 2015
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Practice leaders prefer hiring radiologists with subspecialty training and general capabilities. This hiring preference balances deep expertise with broad clinical skills for diverse practice needs.

Keywords:
general radiologistmultispecialty radiologistradiologistsingle-specialty radiologistsubspecialty radiologist

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Area of Science:

  • Radiology Workforce Analysis
  • Medical Practice Management
  • Physician Recruitment Strategies

Background:

  • The American College of Radiology (ACR) Commissions on Human Resources and General, Small and Rural Practice collaborated to address physician hiring preferences.
  • A specific question was developed for the annual ACR Workforce Survey to gather data on desired radiologist profiles.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To understand the hiring preferences of radiology practice leaders.
  • To identify the most sought-after qualifications and training backgrounds for new radiologists.

Main Methods:

  • Practice leaders ranked five types of prospective radiologists based on their practice needs.
  • Ranking criteria included single-specialty (subspecialty-focused), single-specialty with general capabilities, multispecialty, general radiologists, and those with dual fellowships in the same specialty.

Main Results:

  • The most preferred candidate profile was a single-specialty radiologist with general capabilities, selected by 68% of practice leaders.
  • Multispecialty radiologists were the second most desired (21%), followed by single-specialty and general radiologists (13%), and those with two fellowships (5%).

Conclusions:

  • Radiology practices generally prefer candidates with fellowship training who also possess broad clinical or modality skills.
  • This preference holds for private, multispecialty, and hospital-owned practices.
  • Academic medical center leaders showed a slight preference for single-specialty radiologists over those with general capabilities.