OBGYN.net
Conference Coverage
From AIUM 44th Conference held in
San Francisco, California - April, 2000
|
click here for audio/video version *requires RealPlayer - free download |
Terry
DuBose, M.S.: “We’re at the 44th Annual AIUM Conference in
San Francisco, April 3rd of 2000.
We have Cathy Babiak with us who is Chair of the American Registry of
Diagnostic Medical Sonographers Board of Directors, and we’re going to ask
her to tell us about the ARDMS. Cathy is from Canada.”
Cathy
Babiak: “That’s
right.”
Terry
DuBose, M.S.: “Tell us about the ARDMS.”
Cathy
Babiak: “Terry,
thank you. As Terry said, ARDMS
is for registered sonographers and we have three credentials.
We have the RDMS, which stands for the Registered Medical Diagnostic
Sonographer; we have the cardiac sonographer with the credentials of RDCS,
and the Registered Vascular Technologist, which is RVT. To
subdivide the RDMS credential, you need to write a specialty exam which
consists of obstetrics, abdomen, neurosonography, or it could be the
ophthalmology exam and once you write the specialty exam, you need to write
a physics component with that as well.
With the cardiac exams there are two exams - the adult echo and the
pediatric echo, and that’s why we need to write an echo physics with that
as well as for vascular technology as for physics and specialty component.
Currently with ARDMS, we have about 39,000 registrants and we’re
hoping to continually expand. We’re looking at expanding into the international market.
What’s very important in being registered is that it helps to
protect the patient’s safety in that when you go for an ultrasound it’s
very important to ask the sonographers whether they have the credential, and
know that they have met a level of competency before having a ultrasound
examination.”
Terry
DuBose, M.S.: “Now who takes this exam?
Sonographers, we know, are non-physician types, what about nurses or
MD’s?”
Cathy
Babiak: “Anyone
who has a health care background
can qualify for the ultrasound examination but they also need to have some
clinical experience, and we recommend a time for that is at least a year’s
experience. We do have a
credential we’re actually trying to get rid of that has some on the job
training and some allied health but we really feel it’s extremely
important to have educational components; so we’re trying by the year 2004
to eliminate that credential on the job training.”
Terry
DuBose, M.S.: “That’s great, and how do they get in touch with you if
somebody’s interested in asking about the ARDMS?”
Cathy
Babiak: “That’s
a good question, there’s a 1-800 number that you can call.
The number is 1-800-541-5754 and anyone at
the office would more than happy to talk to or to send you an
application form to write the exams.”
Terry
DuBose, M.S.: “Good! The
site on the web - www.ardms.org is also
available.”
Cathy
Babiak: “Absolutely,
it is.”
Terry
DuBose, M.S.: “Great. Thank
you very much, Cathy.”
Cathy Babiak: “Thanks, Terry.”
Comments on this interview can be sent to Ultrasound@obgyn.net

Register for 