2006 APS April Meeting
Saturday–Tuesday, April 22–25, 2006;
Dallas, TX
Session P6: The Postdoctoral Experience
10:45 AM–12:35 PM,
Monday, April 24, 2006
Hyatt Regency Dallas
Room: Cumberland J
Sponsoring
Unit:
FGSA
Chair: Minesh Bacrania, APS FGSA Chair
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.APR.P6.3
Abstract: P6.00003 : Postdoctoral Opportunities in Medical Physics
11:25 AM–11:45 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Kenneth Hogstrom
(Department of Physics and Astronomy, Louisiana State University)
The medical physicist is a professional who specializes in the application
of the concepts and methods of physics to the diagnosis and treatment of
human disease. Medical physicists identify their primary discipline to be
radiation therapy (78{\%}), medical imaging (16{\%}), nuclear medicine
(3{\%}), or radiation safety (2{\%}). They state their primary
responsibility to be clinical (78{\%}), academic (9{\%}), research (4{\%}),
etc. Correspondingly, medical physicists reveal their primarily employment
to be a private hospital (42{\%}), university hospital (32{\%}), physicist's
service group (9{\%}), physician's service group (9{\%}), industry (5{\%}),
and government (3{\%}). The most frequent job of medical physicists is
clinical radiation therapy physicist, whose clinical duties include:
equipment acquisition, facility design, commissioning, machine maintenance,
calibration and quality assurance, patient treatment planning, patient dose
calculation, management of patient procedures, development of new
technology, radiation safety, and regulatory compliance. The number of
medical physicists in the United States can be estimated by the number of
members of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM), which
has increased $\approx $5.5{\%} annually since 1969, currently being
$\approx $5,000. New positions plus retirements create a current need $>$300
new medical physicists per year, which exceeds supply. This is supported by
the steady growth in average salaries, being $\approx ${\$}100,000 for PhDs
entering the field and reaching $\approx ${\$}180,000. Graduate programs
alone cannot meet demand, and physicists entering the field through
postdoctoral training in medical physics remain important. Details of
postdoctoral research programs and medical physics residency programs will
provide direction to physics PhD graduates interested in medical physics.
[The AAPM, its annual Professional Information Report, and its Public
Education Committee are acknowledged for information contributing to this
presentation.]
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.APR.P6.3