Abstract
The growth is described of nuclear medicine departments and units in Czechoslovakia in the past 25 years of the existence of the Czechoslovak Society for Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Hygiene, the numbers of personnel and their qualifications. While only three nuclear medicine units were involved in the use of radioisotopes for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes in the 1950's, 29 specialized departments and 15 laboratories are now in existence with a staff of 299 medical doctors and other university graduates and 365 technicians and nurses. They operate all possible instruments, from simple detector devices via gamma cameras to computer tomographs. Briefly, the involvement of the Society is described in coordinated research programs, both with institutions in the country and with the other CMEA countries and IAEA.
Hupka, S
[1]
- Ustav Klinickej Onkologie, Bratislava (Czechoslovakia)
Citation Formats
Hupka, S.
Czechoslovak nuclear medicine, development and present state.
Serbia and Montenegro: N. p.,
1981.
Web.
Hupka, S.
Czechoslovak nuclear medicine, development and present state.
Serbia and Montenegro.
Hupka, S.
1981.
"Czechoslovak nuclear medicine, development and present state."
Serbia and Montenegro.
@misc{etde_6123587,
title = {Czechoslovak nuclear medicine, development and present state}
author = {Hupka, S}
abstractNote = {The growth is described of nuclear medicine departments and units in Czechoslovakia in the past 25 years of the existence of the Czechoslovak Society for Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Hygiene, the numbers of personnel and their qualifications. While only three nuclear medicine units were involved in the use of radioisotopes for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes in the 1950's, 29 specialized departments and 15 laboratories are now in existence with a staff of 299 medical doctors and other university graduates and 365 technicians and nurses. They operate all possible instruments, from simple detector devices via gamma cameras to computer tomographs. Briefly, the involvement of the Society is described in coordinated research programs, both with institutions in the country and with the other CMEA countries and IAEA.}
journal = []
volume = {4:3}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Serbia and Montenegro}
year = {1981}
month = {Jan}
}
title = {Czechoslovak nuclear medicine, development and present state}
author = {Hupka, S}
abstractNote = {The growth is described of nuclear medicine departments and units in Czechoslovakia in the past 25 years of the existence of the Czechoslovak Society for Nuclear Medicine and Radiation Hygiene, the numbers of personnel and their qualifications. While only three nuclear medicine units were involved in the use of radioisotopes for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes in the 1950's, 29 specialized departments and 15 laboratories are now in existence with a staff of 299 medical doctors and other university graduates and 365 technicians and nurses. They operate all possible instruments, from simple detector devices via gamma cameras to computer tomographs. Briefly, the involvement of the Society is described in coordinated research programs, both with institutions in the country and with the other CMEA countries and IAEA.}
journal = []
volume = {4:3}
journal type = {AC}
place = {Serbia and Montenegro}
year = {1981}
month = {Jan}
}