In accordance with the National Health and Medical Research Council recommendations, this course requires that students comply with the faculty's Immunisation and vaccination policy and procedures.
These are designed to provide maximum protection against the increased risk of some vaccine preventable diseases for students, patients and workers in a health care setting. This policy, and the associated procedures require that students have certain specified vaccinations, and have their blood borne virus status determined, before they commence a clinical placement. Students who have not complied with this policy may not be able to undertake clinical placement, with the attendant academic consequences.
The course develops through four themes of: personal and professional development; population, communities, health and illness; the scientific basis of health care; and applied practice. These studies will develop your understanding of the roles, responsibilities and expectations of health professionals and the personal and professional attributes you will need in the workplace.
These include communication and interpersonal skills, teamwork, critical thinking, ethical and legal issues, and reflective practice. You will also learn about research methodologies and the application of research to the field of health. The focus of these studies is the social, environmental and behavioural contexts of ill health, disease and injury and broad societal issues such as health promotion, the application of epidemiology and statistics in the assessment of health risk in populations, public health, community diversity, population and global health.
You will also develop a sound understanding of evidence-based practice. These studies provide the foundation scientific knowledge of human systems and technology that you will require to become an expert in the field of radiation sciences. This will include physical, biomedical, mathematical and behavioural sciences.
This theme addresses competencies for the radiation sciences. The focus will be on the incorporation of the best available research evidence with the clinical reasoning skills of assessment, management, evaluation and health care across the lifespan and across a spectrum of environments and circumstances.
Where available, elective study will enable you to further develop your knowledge of radiation sciences or to select units from across the University in which you are eligible to enrol. Applications for on campus studies should be made online through the Victorian Tertiary Admissions Centre. Apply through VTAC. You may apply to transfer from another Monash course. Transfers are a competitive process. You may apply mid-year for available courses however consideration will be given as to whether you will be able to follow your course progression.
Please note that if you apply for a course transfer, you should still enrol in your current course as if you were continuing so as not to jeopardise your enrolment in the Faculty if your transfer application is unsuccessful. More about Course Transfer Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences. School of Biomedical Sciences. Mrs Imelda Williams. Study options Our rankings and reputation Campuses Scholarships Student life and support International students How to apply.
Undergraduate - Area of Study Radiography and medical imaging. Notes Unit codes that are not linked to their entry in the handbook are not available for study in the current year. Description The Department of Medical Imaging and Radiation Sciences is committed to providing students with an excellent education in the field of radiography. Students study a program of units covering topics including: methodologies of radiographic, medical, sonographic and breast imaging digital image processing radiologic physics and biology dosimetry and safety pharmacology professional skills and cinical studies research and advanced topics in medical imaging.
On our site Current students Staff Sitemap. Follow a day in the life of third year student Ama and find out. Radiographers use medical imaging, like x-rays, to help diagnose injury or illness.
Look inside our radiography skills lab on campus, as John and Susan show you how radiographers perform an x-ray. You need to satisfy all of the following requirements to be considered for entry into this course. All applicants must satisfy the following prerequisites or their equivalents. These are minimum requirements, admissions to this course is competitive and applicants may need to meet a higher requirement to be offered a place.
This course uses the entire academic record as part of its selection considerations. Applicants with no formal secondary or tertiary qualifications are not eligible to apply for this course. There are many ways to gain entry to a course at Monash. If you don't meet our entry requirements, there are pathways to help. More about alternative pathways Additionally, we recognise that some applicants may have experienced difficulties that have disadvantaged them when applying for university.
More about special admissions schemes Applicants must also meet the English language requirements. Minimum entrance requirements for admission to Monash University Australia. Immunisation : Students must satisfy the Faculty's immunisation requirements. Applicants must be 18 years of age 31 March , to meet the mandatory requirements for clinical placements.
Underage applicants who can not meet this requirement are not eligible for an offer. Please refer to the mandatory compliance web page for additional information. The course develops professional expertise through studies in human biology, the digital technology underpinning radiography and medical imaging, radiographic and medical imaging science with extended periods of evidence based professional practice and research.
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