Abstract
Introduction
Positron Emission Tomography (PET) uses a positron camera and Computed Tomography (CT) to locate radionuclide concentrations within a patient's body for various referral pathways, including oncology, cardiology, and neurology. The PET-CT imaging rollout across the United Kingdom (UK) is a mix of National Health Service and private provider sites, with a varied skills mix in the workforce. This study aims to explore the workplace culture and leadership within a private provider PET-CT departments across the UK to understand the current challenges.
Method
A n=39 question cross-sectional survey using purposive sampling of a single private provider of PET-CT sites across the UK (n=260) was conducted. The survey was divided into n=6 sections: demographics, teamwork, standards and processes, professional development, workload levels, and work environment questions. Data analysis applied descriptive statistics and thematic analysis for recurring themes and patterns.
Results
Twenty-five responses were received, providing a range of answers on what makes an effective team, from communication (64%), collective decision-making (28%), the efficiency of standardisation of protocols (68%), and adequate work environments (72%). Key barriers included variation of protocols across sites (64%), lack of work appraisals (28%), and time to complete mandatory training (48%), and daily tasks (60%).
Conclusion
Findings present opportunities to improve the culture and leadership by reviewing staffing levels, workforce planning, training and communication. Specifically, the dissemination of information between teams was identified as an area for future improvement.
Implications for practice
Improvements to communication, allocated time for training and career opportunities would assist staff retention and teamwork. Future research into the standardisation of PET-CT protocols would be beneficial.
Positron Emission Tomography (PET) uses a positron camera and Computed Tomography (CT) to locate radionuclide concentrations within a patient's body for various referral pathways, including oncology, cardiology, and neurology. The PET-CT imaging rollout across the United Kingdom (UK) is a mix of National Health Service and private provider sites, with a varied skills mix in the workforce. This study aims to explore the workplace culture and leadership within a private provider PET-CT departments across the UK to understand the current challenges.
Method
A n=39 question cross-sectional survey using purposive sampling of a single private provider of PET-CT sites across the UK (n=260) was conducted. The survey was divided into n=6 sections: demographics, teamwork, standards and processes, professional development, workload levels, and work environment questions. Data analysis applied descriptive statistics and thematic analysis for recurring themes and patterns.
Results
Twenty-five responses were received, providing a range of answers on what makes an effective team, from communication (64%), collective decision-making (28%), the efficiency of standardisation of protocols (68%), and adequate work environments (72%). Key barriers included variation of protocols across sites (64%), lack of work appraisals (28%), and time to complete mandatory training (48%), and daily tasks (60%).
Conclusion
Findings present opportunities to improve the culture and leadership by reviewing staffing levels, workforce planning, training and communication. Specifically, the dissemination of information between teams was identified as an area for future improvement.
Implications for practice
Improvements to communication, allocated time for training and career opportunities would assist staff retention and teamwork. Future research into the standardisation of PET-CT protocols would be beneficial.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 102994 |
| Journal | Radiography |
| Volume | 31 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2 Jun 2025 |
Keywords
- Communication
- Culture
- Leadership
- PET-CT
- Skills-mix workforce
- Training
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