Students get extensive hands-on training in the sonography and simulation laboratories
on UAA’s campus, as well as through clinical experiences in hospital and outpatient
settings.
The Diagnostic Medical Sonography (DMS) program provides education and training to
prepare students for employment as a general sonographer. The program also prepares
students for national certification exams from the American Registry for Diagnostic
Medical Sonography and the American Registry of Radiologic Technologists, which many
health care employers require.
Sonographers use a transmitting device called a transducer to send out high-frequency
ultrasound waves into a patient. The reflected sound forms echoes, and those echoes
generate a visual representation of the patient’s internal organs, vasculature, and
other soft tissue structures. The images produced are used to diagnose, treat, and
screen for medical conditions. Sonographers work under the supervision of a radiologist
or other physician in a variety of medical settings and health facilities.
The diagnostic medical sonography profession has three primary career paths: general
sonography (abdominal organs, pregnancy, female reproductive system, and most of the
other body systems), cardiac sonography (heart), and vascular technology (blood vessels).
The UAA DMS program boasts a 100 percent pass rate on the American Registry of Diagnostic
Medical Sonographers’ Sonographic Principles and Instrumentation Exam.
The UAA/ISU Doctor of Pharmacy Program shows that now more than ever, leadership comes down to knowing when and how to pivot—adapting with purpose to serve communities across Alaska and Idaho.
UAA's College of Health and Idaho State University (ISU) continue their collaboration to offer pharmacy education in Anchorage, now in its eighth year.
Alaska continues to see staffing shortages at pharmacies, made worse by the pandemic, but also due to conditions affecting the state more broadly. UAA/ISU Doctor of Pharmacy program faculty member, Dr. Coleman Cutchins, discusses the issue with Alaska Public Media.
Who’s ready to be scared? For this episode of Pharmacy Fusion, we're venturing into the eerie and enigmatic realms of fear, a topic that touches on both the psychological and pharmaceutical aspects of our lives.
There are many pathways a person can take in choosing their career. Have you ever thought about how many people have degrees they aren't using? Chris Nicolette thought he wanted to be a pharmacist but along the way realized how much he loved the science of studying drug interactions in the human body. Now, he's working to earn a PhD in Pharmaceutical Sciences at ISU, and looking forward to a promising future in the world of pharmacology and drug discovery.