College
- Center City Campus
- Sidney Kimmel Medical College
Degree Earned
- Residency
Program Length
2 years
Program Type
- On Campus
Call to Actions
Leadership
- Program Director, Medical Physics Residency
- Clinical Assistant Professor
- Clinical Assistant Professor
- Associate Program Director, Medical Physics Residency
Program Information
Medical Physics Education
At Thomas Jefferson University, one of our three founding mission goals is to educate future physicians, nurses, scientists, and allied health professionals, who will take a leadership role in the development of healthcare reform. Our mission is achieved through shared values:
- Excellence and innovation
- Integrity and respect
- Teamwork and communication
The Department of Radiation Oncology offers two dynamic and comprehensive residency programs. As a hospital-based service with a major academic role within the medical college, our department considers resident training its most important academic function.
The Medical Physics Residency program is directed toward providing a two-year program of progressive, supervised clinical training for graduates of medical physics, traditional physics, and closely related fields. The objective of the residency program is to provide training in radiation oncology physics in a structured clinic environment for individuals wishing to practice professional radiation oncology physics. Faculty physicists provide instruction in all modes of radiation oncology physics: megavoltage photon-and electron-beam therapy, interstitial and intracavitary radioactive-source implantations, stereotactic radiosurgery and radiotherapy, intensity modulation radiation therapy, and the diagnostic and therapeutic uses of radioactive isotopes.
For information on open positions, please check the AAPM website under the CAP program. Jefferson is a CAMPEP-accredited institution.