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subject: "someone Photographing Bones Cannot Just Imagine What Sufferance Is, Surely?" [print this page]


Radiographers are thin on the ground when it comes to medical diagnostic procedures. This is causing a delay in dispensing medical treatment in hospitals due to the chain of treatment having a missing link, namely a radiographer. In the hope of attracting potential newbies to the ranks of the radiography fraternity, the UK Government are taking various steps to swell the depleted ranks of radiographers.

The UK based Society and College of Radiographers has instituted a Radiographer of the Year Award in an effort to highlight the profession's profile. The winner is honoured at a ceremony in England at the House of Commons.

The gripping sympathetic fiction/faction novel, "I Can See Clearly Now the Rain is Gone", by George Korankye based on the real life incident at Dunblane will help swell the interest in the role of the radiographer in the medical profession.

This is the first time a fictional book, "I Can See Clearly Now the Rain is Gone", features a radiographer as its hero. The title of the book has been taken from legendary singer Johnny Nash's song of the same title.

The tragedy in the novel centres around a radiographer, caught up in a situation so terrible that it couldn't be contemplated, and everyone involved is stretched to the limit of their skills and their emotions. From the pits of despair the story reveals how a group of professionals, at the fictional Bonnyholly Hospital, deal with a once in a lifetime major incident of unbelievable horror, they will experience the gamut of all human emotions.

With the lack of public awareness of what a radiographer's role is in the medical profession, the Chief Executive Officer of the Society and College of Radiographers, Richard Evans, commended George Korankye in broaching the subject. Indeed, Mr Evans even went so far as to tell second time author George Korankye that he would be pleased to assist in spreading the news of the book.

"I Can See Clearly Now the Rain is Gone", although George Korankye's second book, is his first effort at fiction writing. He looks forward to it arousing the reader's curiosity in the indispensable roles of radiographers.

Radiographers carry out various tasks, but one particularly important role is in the operating theatre. When it comes to urology and orthopaedic procedures, you certainly wouldn't want to undergo surgery without one being present.

On a didactic note, archaeologists, historians and anthropologists have exploited the diagnostic talents of radiographers in unearthing more about our ancestors by x-raying mummies, tombs, etc without breaching caskets. Anonymously to the public, radiographers take on research in universities and non academic amenities.

by: Jane West




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