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Thursday, April 23, 2015

                                                Medical Illustrator 



Duties and Responsibilities: A medical illustrator is a professional artist with specialized training and advanced education in medicine, science, art, design, visual technology, media techniques, and in theories related to communication and learning. Collaborating with scientists, physicians, and other content specialists, medical illustrators serve as visual translators of complex technical information to support education, medical and life science research, patient care, patient education, public relations, and marketing objectives.

Salary: $62,000-$175,000

Education: The majority of medical illustrators in the profession have a master's degree from an accredited two-year graduate program in medical illustration. There are currently three programs in the United States and one in Canada that are accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP). Each program accepts 16 or fewer students each year, so entrance into the schools is very competitive.
Coursework varies somewhat from program to program, but all include an advanced course in human anatomy with dissection and may include a combination of other biomedical science courses such as pathology, micro anatomy, physiology, embryology, and neuroanatomy, along with specialized applied art courses such as surgical illustration. Other classes may include color theory, instructional design, photography, interactive media development, 3-D modeling and web design, along with traditional drawing and computer applications.

Reflection: Becoming a medical illustrator sounds like a fascinating job. Not only is this my first time hearing about this job but it's also my first time that I really want to reconsider my career path. In this job you are taking care of your patients and interacting with the public too. This career sounds like something that I might want to end up doing. Even though the career path is very long to get there I wouldn't mind to try it out and see how it goes. With all that side the rate pay is also really good; I would consider doing this job.

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