Medical Radiation Practice Board of Australia - End of arrangements allowing some medical radiation practitioners to become registered
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End of arrangements allowing some medical radiation practitioners to become registered

16 Feb 2015

From 1 July 2015, arrangements that allowed some medical radiation practitioners to become registered as the profession joined the National Scheme1 will expire.

Affected practitioners

Medical radiation practitioners who have not yet applied for registration will be affected, including radiographers, radiation therapists and nuclear medicine technologists.

After 1 July 2015, the only way to become registered will be by completing an approved program of study, demonstrating substantial equivalence or doing an exam or assessment as required by the Medical Radiation Practice Board of Australia (the National Board).

Background

Medical radiation practitioners joined the National Scheme and became regulated on 1 July 2012; practitioners who were previously practising as a medical radiation practitioner (including radiographers, radiation therapists and nuclear medicine technologists) are able to register with the National Board through a Grandparenting Standard2.

The intent of the grandparenting provisions was to ensure that practitioners who were legitimately practising before 1 July 2012 (particularly in those jurisdictions that did not require registration) were not unjustly disadvantaged by the move to the National Scheme.

The National Law

Under section 52 of the National Law3, an individual is eligible to apply for general registration if they have successfully completed a qualification recognised under the National Law as an approved program of study, or if they hold an overseas qualification which is considered by the National Board as equivalent to an approved program of study.

Only medical radiation practitioners who are registered with the National Board can practise using protected titles or make claims to be qualified to practise a regulated health profession. Penalties exist if you pretend to be registered (or lead someone to believe that you are) when you are not. You can check whether you are registered on the AHPRA website using the Check your health practitioner is registered form.

More information

More information on the Grandparenting standards is available on our Registration Standards page.


1National Registration and Accreditation Scheme

2Section 303 of the National Law sets out the ‘grandparenting’ provisions for individuals to be eligible to apply for registration to the profession but who do not hold an academic qualification gained by completing an approved program of study.

3Health Practitioner Regulation National Law as in force in each state and territory

 
 
Page reviewed 16/02/2015