“…[14,17] This order of concern is further developed in recent qualitative research in general radiography, which indicates how clinicians in the modern UK National Health Service (hereafter NHS) workforce rarely feel that they have time to be sensitive to the intricate interpersonal needs of patients, especially those most vulnerable, even when they are demonstrably well aware of them. [18][19][20] As such, both the actual and perceived need to 'rush on' to the next patient in broader staff-pressurised clinical environments can leave the practitioner conscious that (a) they have learned little from each encounter, and (b) that they may have 'short-changed' the patient in terms of the care that could ideally have been provided. It is reported that the personal and professional confidence of junior radiographers, in particular, is recurrently damaged as a result.…”