Tele-nuclear medicine
This article presents a description of tele-nuclear medicine and, after outlining its history, a wide, representative range of its applications. Tele-nuclear medicine has benefited greatly from technological progress, which for several decades has provided greater data transfer rates and storage cap...
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Series: | South African Journal of Radiology |
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doaj-c3e0663878df4c0caa6dd56f730f7e032020-11-24T21:41:18ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Radiology1027-202X2078-67782014-07-01181e1e510.4102/sajr.v18i1.595587Tele-nuclear medicineNathanael Sabbah0Sinclair Wynchank1Department of Nuclear Medicine, School of Medicine, Stanford University, United States of AmericaInnovation Centre, Medical Research Council, South Africa; Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, South AfricaThis article presents a description of tele-nuclear medicine and, after outlining its history, a wide, representative range of its applications. Tele-nuclear medicine has benefited greatly from technological progress, which for several decades has provided greater data transfer rates and storage capacity at steadily decreasing cost. Differences in the practice of nuclear medicine between developed and developing countries arise mainly from disparities in their available infrastructure, funding and education levels of personnel involved. Consequently there are different emphases in their tele-nuclear medicine, which are elaborated. It is concluded that tele-nuclear medicine is important for all countries, but the emphasis on its application may differ between developed and developing nations, with an emphasis on distance learning in the latter.https://sajr.org.za/index.php/sajr/article/view/595 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Nathanael Sabbah Sinclair Wynchank |
spellingShingle |
Nathanael Sabbah Sinclair Wynchank Tele-nuclear medicine South African Journal of Radiology |
author_facet |
Nathanael Sabbah Sinclair Wynchank |
author_sort |
Nathanael Sabbah |
title |
Tele-nuclear medicine |
title_short |
Tele-nuclear medicine |
title_full |
Tele-nuclear medicine |
title_fullStr |
Tele-nuclear medicine |
title_full_unstemmed |
Tele-nuclear medicine |
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tele-nuclear medicine |
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AOSIS |
series |
South African Journal of Radiology |
issn |
1027-202X 2078-6778 |
publishDate |
2014-07-01 |
description |
This article presents a description of tele-nuclear medicine and, after outlining its history, a wide, representative range of its applications. Tele-nuclear medicine has benefited greatly from technological progress, which for several decades has provided greater data transfer rates and storage capacity at steadily decreasing cost. Differences in the practice of nuclear medicine between developed and developing countries arise mainly from disparities in their available infrastructure, funding and education levels of personnel involved. Consequently there are different emphases in their tele-nuclear medicine, which are elaborated. It is concluded that tele-nuclear medicine is important for all countries, but the emphasis on its application may differ between developed and developing nations, with an emphasis on distance learning in the latter. |
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https://sajr.org.za/index.php/sajr/article/view/595 |
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AT nathanaelsabbah telenuclearmedicine AT sinclairwynchank telenuclearmedicine |
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