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Following from the global effects of COVID-19 and its impacts on the global health workforce, the main focus for the Medical Radiation Practice Board of Australia was the availability of medical radiation practitioners and the pipeline for new registrants.
The Board worked with the Medical Radiation Practice Accreditation Committee on funding and fee structures, with the aim of balancing the costs of accreditation between education providers and practitioners.
The revised Professional capabilities for medical radiation practice were published by the Board in November 2019. The Board started a post-implementation review to investigate any safety or unintended consequences arising from the professional capabilities. The report and outcomes from the review were published in June 2023. Interprofessional practice and workplace culture are now future focus points for the Board.
Following a multiprofession review of supervised practice arrangements in 2020 and 2021, the Board agreed to recommend to health ministers that the Supervised practice registration standard be retired on 30 March 2023. The multiprofession Supervised practice framework for medical radiation practitioners came into effect on 1 April.
To support practitioners with the continual evolution of artificial intelligence (AI), the Board published a statement on the role of AI in medical radiation practice. The statement identified that patient safety was paramount when AI and related technologies are used in practice.
Through its newsletter, the Board continued to support ethics-approved research in medical radiation practice. Recent research projects include attitudes to scheduled medicines, attitudes to evidence-based practice and work-related musculoskeletal issues.
Since 2016, the Board has assessed and maintained an equivalent status for qualifications approved in a number of overseas jurisdictions, including the United Kingdom and New Zealand. In October, the Board assessed qualifications approved by the Irish regulator for medical radiation practice as equivalent to Australian qualifications. The Board also accepts a number of examination results used as the basis of safe practice in overseas jurisdictions.
The Board continued to meet with national and international stakeholders including the New Zealand Medical Radiation Practice Board, the Canadian Association of Medical Radiation Technologists, Medical Radiations Australia, the Australian Society of Medical Imaging and Radiation Therapy (ASMIRT), the Australian and New Zealand Society of Nuclear Medicine (ANZSNM), the Australian Sonographers Association and others to discuss emerging issues in medical radiation practice, with a focus on workforce availability, educational pipelines and capabilities necessary for professional practice.
The Board has developed a closer working relationship with the NSW Medical Radiation Practice Council and looks forward to further collaboration on joint projects and presentations. Representatives of the Board also attended the ASMIRT national conference in Sydney in April and the ANZSNM annual conference in Adelaide in May.
Ms Cara Miller, Chair