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To: kcvl
How long before the H1 & L1 visas and immigrants (illegal and legals) start to work for peanuts for these jobs? Where would someone go to learn to do this, as one person in this thread believes that colleges should not be used to teach job skills. Also, those salaries will only go down as more and more people move to those jobs, supply of workers outpaces demand for them.
75 posted on 01/21/2004 10:18:15 AM PST by looscnnn ("Live free or die; death is not the worst of evils" Gen. John Stark 1809)
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To: looscnnn
Your local pharmacy school, local college for radiology techs or contact one of these companies for more information...(use GOOGLE for telephone or email addresses)


Nuclear Pharmacies by Company/Practice Site:

Syncor & CPSI now Cardinal Health
Tyco Healthcare / Mallinckrodt
Amersham Health
Geodax Technology, Inc.
Eastern Isotopes, Inc.
Independent Pharmacies
Institutional Practice
PETNet

or

http://www.comphealth.com/website/searchjobs/nuclearmedicinetechjobs.html

Diagnostic Imaging Online
May 29, 2003


Demand for techs soars, salaries follow

A long streak of increases in both demand and salaries has favored radiologists. Imaging technologists are following suit, according to a recent survey conducted by Allied Consulting in Dallas.

The average salary for a radiologic technologist grew from $42,000 in 2000 to $47,000 in 2002. The average high-end salary grew from $52,000 in 2000 to $66,000 in 2002. Nuclear medicine technologists and sonographers enjoyed an average increase in high-end salary of about $15,000 between 2000 and 2002.

Imaging technology advancements in the past decade drastically increased the number of CT, MRI, ultrasound, nuclear medicine, and mammography studies. This, in turn, created a specialized demand for imaging services that need certified operators. The general radiology technologist is a thing of the past, said John Hawkins, Allied Consulting's vice president. Unfortunately, not enough training programs are available to support the demand for technologists.

One way the radiology community is addressing the shortage of both radiologists and technologists is through the concept of the supertech -- physician extenders who perform many ancillary radiological duties, thereby freeing up the doctors to read and interpret more films.

Radiology practitioner assistants command between $60,000 and $105,000 annually, twice the salary of RTs, according to Jane Van Valkenburg, Ph.D., director of the RPA program at Weber State University in Ogden, UT. The American College of Radiology expects the salary of its newly created version of the supertech -- the radiology assistant -- to be comparable to that of the RPA.

-- By Harold Abella



79 posted on 01/21/2004 10:44:13 AM PST by kcvl
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