Physicist PhD 2
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![]() United States, California, Loma Linda | |
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Physicist PhD 2 - (Full-time, Rotating Shifts)
About the Department: The Department of Radiation Medicine at Loma Linda University has a staff of about 100 employees, including nine radiation oncologists. The physics team of medical professionals comprising four PhD physicists, three MS physicists, a calibration physicist, and six dosimetrists. The department's equipment and facilities include three linear accelerators, a dedicated CT scanner, a PET-CT scanner, a patient immobilization facility, a device manufacturing facility, and a physics/dosimetry laboratory. An MRI center and nuclear medicine facilities are in the immediate vicinity. Loma Linda University Medical Center (LLUMC) is also home to world's first hospital-based proton treatment center, which features three isocentric gantries, two fixed-beam treatment lines, and a research room with three additional fixed-beam lines dedicated solely to investigations. The department also offers radiation therapy at satellite facilities in Beaumont (about 25 miles southeast of LLUMC) and Murrieta (about 45 miles south of LLUMC). Each of these facilities has one linear accelerator. Staff in the department use x-rays and proton beams to treat patients presenting with all kinds of cancers. We perform 3D-CRT, IMRT, VMAT, SRS, SBRT, TBI, and ocular treatments. The department also offers LDR brachytherapy, mainly for some gynecologic cancers, and Sr-90 ophthalmic treatment for pterygium. The department offers residency programs in therapeutic medical physics and radiation oncology. The department also supports a Radiation Therapy Technology (RTT) program through LLU's School of Allied Health Professions. Immediate Future: Currently, the department is in the process of acquiring a new linac (Varian Edge) and a Varian Bravos HDR system. Further, we are preparing to upgrade one of our scattered-beam proton treatment gantries to pencil-beam scanning capability through the addition of a MEVION S250-FIT compact proton therapy system. The new Chief Physicist will be tasked with bringing these modalities to full clinical utility in the near future. Another challenge will be to rebuild a robust clinical physics research program and establish research collaborations between clinical personnel and the medical physics team. Job Summary: The Physicist PhD 2 provides leadership and supervision of clinical physics activities such as treatment planning, quality assurance, and treatment delivery; and improves the quality and safety of radiation treatments through research and development activities, and provides education through formal and informal instruction. These services may be provided at LLUMC and LLUCH hospitals. Performs other duties as needed. Our mission is to continue the teaching and healing ministry of Jesus Christ. Our core values are compassion, excellence, humility, integrity, justice, teamwork and wholeness. |