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...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nathanael Sabbah, Sinclair Wynchank
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2014-07-01
Series:South African Journal of Radiology
Online Access:https://sajr.org.za/index.php/sajr/article/view/595
id doaj-c3e0663878df4c0caa6dd56f730f7e03
record_format Article
spelling 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
collection 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
title_sort tele-nuclear medicine
publisher 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.
url https://sajr.org.za/index.php/sajr/article/view/595
work_keys_str_mv AT nathanaelsabbah telenuclearmedicine
AT sinclairwynchank telenuclearmedicine
_version_ 1725922701645709312