Admission Privileges and Clinical Responsibilities for Interventional Radiologists
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Springer New York LLC
Abstract
Although clinical involvement by interventional radiologists in the care of their patients was advocated at the inception of the specialty, the change into the clinical paradigm has been slow and patchy for reasons related to pattern of practice, financial remuneration or absence of training. The case for the value of clinical responsibilities has been made in a number of publications and the consequences of not doing so have been manifest in the erosion of the role of the interventional radiologists particularly in the fields of peripheral vascular and neuro intervention. With the recent recognition of interventional radiology (IR) as a primary specialty in the USA and the formation of IR division in the Union of European Medical Specialists and subsequent recognition of the subspecialty in many European countries, it is appropriate to relook at the issue and emphasize the need for measures to promote the clinical role of the interventional radiologist. © 2014, Springer Science+Business Media New York and the Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiological Society of Europe (CIRSE).
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Admission privileges, Clinical, Interventional radiology, Reimbursement, Canada, Clinical competence, Europe, Humans, Interprofessional relations, Physician's role, Practice patterns, physicians', Radiology, interventional, Societies, medical, United states, Article, Clinical practice, Current procedural terminology, Diagnosis related group, Hospital admission, Human, Interventional radiologist, Medical education, Medical ethics, Medical specialist, Patient care, Priority journal, Radiodiagnosis, Responsibility, Work, Manpower, Medical society, Physician attitude, Public relations