Different AHP disciplines need different shortlist evidence. Therapy, imaging, respiratory and laboratory roles should define setting, equipment, mandatory training and patient context clearly.
- Therapy roles need setting and patient-group evidence.
- Imaging roles should name modality and equipment context.
- Laboratory roles need competency and workflow clarity.
- Respiratory roles should separate acute, critical care and outpatient needs.
Therapy roles need setting clarity
Physiotherapy, occupational therapy and speech and language therapy briefs should explain patient population, setting, supervision, documentation, productivity expectations and whether paediatric, neuro, orthopaedic, acute, community or home-visit experience matters.
Imaging and diagnostics need modality detail
Imaging roles should name modality, equipment context, shift pattern, call requirements and registration or training expectations. A generic imaging title may miss critical differences between CT, MRI, ultrasound, X-ray and nuclear medicine work.
Laboratory and respiratory roles need workflow evidence
Laboratory, respiratory and related clinical roles often require specific workflow, setting or competency evidence. Defining this early helps recruiters shortlist candidates whose experience is genuinely relevant.
Discipline-specific brief prompts
- Modality, specialty or patient group
- Equipment, software or workflow context
- Mandatory training and registration status
- Setting and supervision level
- Call, weekend or shift requirements
- Must-have versus preferred evidence
Questions this article answers
Why do discipline details matter so much?
AHP roles can look similar by title but require very different equipment, setting, patient-group or competency evidence.
Can a recruiter infer requirements from a job title?
Some requirements can be inferred, but employer-confirmed details produce a safer and more relevant shortlist.