
Published December 27, 2025 | Updated December 27, 2025
By MedCourse
Useful, relevant, and interesting content for UK Junior Doctors.
About the Author
Osama Ramadan, higher speciality training in nuclear medicine, West Midlands region – Birmingham ( City Hospital & Queen Elizabeth) and Coventry University hospitals.
I am an Egyptian graduate. After obtaining a GMC licence via PLAB, I worked in the NHS, mainly in Medicine, and then completed IMT training. Once completed, IMT3 as well as MRCP, I worked as a medical registrar in acute medicine. Decided to reject a few ST4 training offers in nephrology, neurology, and ID to join Nuclear Medicine, as I have always wanted a specialty related to radiology.
Courses & Conferences to Attend
The majority of the following courses are Online, on the Coursera and Edx platforms; these used to be free when I did them.
- Medical Neuroscience
- Introduction to Clinical Neurology
- Understanding the Brain: The Neurobiology of Everyday Life
- Instructional Methods in Health Professions Education
- SciWrite Writing & Statistics in Medicine by Stanford University
- Understanding Research Methods
- Fundamentals of Clinical Trials
- Statistical Reasoning for Public Health Estimation
- Case-Based Introduction to Biostatistics,
- Design and Interpretation of Clinical Trials
- Statistical Reasoning for Public Health Estimation, Inference & Interpretation
- Understanding Research: An Overview for Health Professionals
- Data Management for Clinical Research
- East Midlands Leadership& Management Programme
- RCP teaching course
Any leadership course offered by your deanery or trust
Introduction to Good Clinical Practice ( NIHR)
Any research-related courses offered by your trust, even online.
Statistical Analysis of fMRI Data can be found online on Coursera
Statistical Analysis of Functional MRI Data
Introduction to Biomedical Imaging
The last 3 courses could be done online for free, and take a copy of your progress to prove you completed them ( I think now if you want a certificate, it would be with some fees)
How to Maximise Your Portfolio
Medic mentors: you could volunteer for a few days, and they provide some teaching Prizes.
Participate in the regional/ national teaching days in your region, even with a case presentation.
Try to find someone in your trust who works in research and show interest and ask for participation, if not there are plenty of courses you can do to show your research capabilities in the application as the courses I mentioned above, also try peer reviews in Cureus journal, you could earn Cureus scholar honours status after few months of peer reviewing and you could use it as a research prize.
Try to organise a local teaching forum on a weekly or monthly basis and keep the schedule as a record, with feedback.
You can also do this course to claim teaching points, Instructional Methods in Health Professions Education by the University of Michigan, which is free, and you can copy your progress.
Get QIP done and presented in national or international forums, even online.
There are some competitions that you can participate in, such as: BNMS and BSIR essay competitions, SRT poster competition, or attend any of these meetings / their conferences, or one of the BIR annual meetings
Making the Most of Your Day Job
The most important thing is to organise a couple of taster weeks in the Radiology and Nuclear Medicine departments. This will enrich your knowledge of things that you could mention in your interview. To shadow one of the registrar for a few days to see how they spend their day.
Work on maximising your MSRA score. There are plenty of resources to mention, but a few: Passmedicine, pastes, and Onexamination, etc. Please pay careful attention to SJT questions, as the majority of people struggle with this.
Try to subscribe or become a member of some societies as BNMS, EANM, BIR etc, Some of these are free/ discounted for junior doctors.
Making the Most of Nuclear Medicine Placements
Get involved in teaching, audits, and leadership roles. Write a local guide for new doctors to help them settle.
What About Non-Nuclear Medicine Placements?
To read about the specialty beforehand and ask around colleagues and seniors.













