Infection Control in Radiology
An infection control course for radiology technologists.
- Approved by the ASRT (American Society of Radiologic Technologists) for 2.25 CE Credits
- For sonographers: Accepted by the ARDMS® for RDMS®, RDCS®, and RVT®. Meets ARRT®, ARDMS® and APCA® CME reporting requirements
- Subscription duration: 365 days from purchase date
- Downloadable transcript available
- *NEW* Video format available with subtitles
- Meets the CE requirements of the following states: California, Texas, Florida, Kentucky, Massachusetts, and New Mexico
- Meets ARRT® CE reporting requirements
- Accepted by the NMTCB®
- Hassle-free 30-day full refund policy*
Infection Control in Radiology is a continuing education course that addresses infection control as it applies to radiologic technologists. Infection control refers to the policies and practices used by hospitals and other healthcare facilities to control and minimize the spread of infections. This is achieved through the implementation of control programs, which include surveillance, isolation, outbreak management, environmental hygiene, employee health, education, and infection prevention policies, and infection management.
Radiologic technologists are very often exposed to different infectious patients. For this reason, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the World Health Organization (WHO) set guidelines for the proper use of personal protective equipment and decontamination of reusable medical equipment. To help technologists with adhering to these guidelines, this course reviews proper hand hygiene, including hand-washing and hand-rubbing techniques, as well as isolation and infection control procedures.
In addition, Infection Control in Radiology covers the role of the radiologic technologist in preventing the transmission of infectious disease processes in healthcare units and highlights the importance of policies and procedures detailing occupational exposure management when a technologist has been infected accidentally.
Discipline | Major content category & subcategories | CE Credits provided |
NMT-2017 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
NMT-2022 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
RA-2018 | Patient Care | |
Patient Management | 2.25 | |
RA-2023 | Patient Care | |
Patient Management | 2.25 | |
RAD-2017 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
RAD-2022 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
SON-2019 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
SON-2024 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
THR-2017 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions | 2.25 | |
THR-2022 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
VI-2017 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
VI-2023 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
VS-2021 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 | |
VS-2024 | Patient Care | |
Patient Interactions and Management | 2.25 |
Section 1: Infection Control
- Disease and Infection
- Types of Pathogens
- Establishment of Infectious Disease
- Stages of Infection
- Chain of Infection
- Routes for Disease Transmission
- Health Care–Associated Infections
- Types of Hospital Microbes
- Defense Mechanisms of the Body
- Medical and Surgical Asepsis
- Standard Precautions
- Surgical Procedure
- Aseptic & Non-Aseptic procedures
- Mobile and surgical radiography
- Coronavirus
Get it now!
One-time payment. No hidden fees. No extra charges per credit.
|
|