A practical introduction to how we approach benign radiotherapy teaching
Hip: Anatomy, Function, and Clinical Considerations
This short pre-course video shows how we work through a clinical problem from the ground up, starting with anatomy and function, and moving towards practical clinical reasoning.
Rather than listing structures in isolation, the focus is on understanding how anatomy, movement, and symptoms connect, and how that understanding supports clearer decision-making in everyday practice.
This is one of the pre-course preparation modules used in our Benign Radiotherapy course and is shared here to give you a genuine sense of the teaching style and level you can expect during our full in-person course.
(This video is part of the RT-ABC pre-course preparation series and is shared for your personal learning only.
Recording, reproducing, or redistributing this video is not allowed.)
What this video prepares you for
The approach you see in this video is the same approach used throughout the Benign Radiotherapy courses.
During the full program, we build on this foundation to help you:
link anatomy and function to common benign conditions
approach joint and soft-tissue pain systematically
understand imaging findings in their clinical context
develop clearer, more consistent clinical reasoning
From pre-course preparation to clinical application
The pre-course modules are designed to ensure everyone arrives with a shared anatomical and functional foundation, allowing the in-person courses to focus on application, discussion, and decision-making.
If this way of working resonates with you, the upcoming Benign Radiotherapy courses expand on these principles across multiple anatomical regions and clinical scenarios.
Continue with the full Benign Radiotherapy course
Places are limited to maintain small-group teaching and discussion.

