- #176
Clinac
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Can anyone please explain the basic concept of dose gradients as applied to the gamma index where used with Dose difference and DTA etc.
Clinac said:Can anyone please explain the basic concept of dose gradients as applied to the gamma index where used with Dose difference and DTA etc.
MSstrawberry said:Hi, I'm a newbie here, but am I glad I found you :-)
I wonder what would you advise to a Canadian medical physicist entering the job market next summer? CAMPEP accredited MS, ditto accredited residency... And we are thinking about moving south of the border.
Thanks for every bit of information.
GuillaumeA said:Hi everyone !
I need some help about high energy electron beams...
The SURFACE percent depth dose increases while energy beam increases. I did not find any courses or papers establishing the reasons of this well-know phenomenon (I mean known by people working in radiation therapy). I suppose it is due to contamination electrons from the linac head but I am not sure at all. If anyone knows, please let me know and if you can give me your reference/paper it would be awsome.
I am desperate :-) because I have been searching for two weeks...
Thanks in advance
GuillaumeA
Fullhawking said:I enjoy mechanics and things of this nature. It is really easy to forget the other branches of physics like the medical field. ATB for starting a thread on it. Medical physics has lead to great devices like the MRI. IMO it is among the most interesting devices in physics only topped by tesla coils and particle accelerators. Anyway, besides the hair raising name like Magnetic Resonance Imaging, it has really aided in the diagnosis of ailments which is never a bad thing.
GuillaumeA said:Hi everyone !
I need some help about high energy electron beams...
The SURFACE percent depth dose increases while energy beam increases. I did not find any courses or papers establishing the reasons of this well-know phenomenon (I mean known by people working in radiation therapy). I suppose it is due to contamination electrons from the linac head but I am not sure at all. If anyone knows, please let me know and if you can give me your reference/paper it would be awsome.
I am desperate :-) because I have been searching for two weeks...
Thanks in advance
GuillaumeA
Doubell said:so how long would one have to study at the university level for a profession in medical physics
Choppy said:It sounds like you're asking about clinical electron beams, in which case I'm not sure you would really define something as a "contaminant" electron.
The shape of the electron PDD is determined by the scattering properties of the electrons themselves - the differential cross-sections of which are dependent on energy. You should be able to look these up in any standard medical physics textbook like Johns and Cunningham and that will have references to their original derivations. Solving the system for a PDD is a rather complex task to perform analytically. Your best bets for solving them for a specific geometry are the Monte Carlo method or grid-based numerical techniques.
qball2 said:This post is to everyone who claimed there is a shortage of jobs in medical physics. It's to everyone who claimed that it should be very easy to get a job in medical physics after graduation.
There was a memo from the American Board of Radiology dated July 29, 2010. It reads:
"ABR RP Trustee Statement
a.) Waiver for Part 1 Employment Requirement
b.) Reminder of Application Submission Deadline
Date: July 29, 2010
The ABR has become aware that because of current economic circumstances many recent graduates are experiencing difficulty finding employment in medical physics. Because of this situation, the ABR is waiving the requirement for employment in medical physics as a condition for taking Part 1 effective immediately. All other Part 1 requirements remain in effect.
The requirement for clinical experience prior to taking Part 2 remains unchanged.
Please note also that the deadline for submitting complete applications for the 2011 written examinations in Radiologic Physics is September 30, 2010. With the exception of the Special Circumstances category [http://theabr.org/ic/ic_rp/ic_rp_process.html] , applications received after that date will be returned to the candidate unopened with the next opportunity for submission being in July 2011 under the requirements in place for the 2012 examinations. " [emphasis mine]
You are all wrong.
You can ban me all you want, but you cannot silence the truth.
Game. Set. Match. And QED.
AtomicPile said:I argue that there has always been an oversupply of medical physicists. And anyone who claimed there is was a shortage of medical physicists consciously engaged in an act fraud.
Choppy said:Why are you so full of animosity that you would accuse people of a criminal act just to further your argument?
At my institution I live daily with the fact that we are grossly understaffed.
Further, your argument doesn't hold much water. If a hospital administrator has no money to hire a physicist, an increase in clinical demand won't change that - at least not immediately. Funding timescales work on the order of years.
You also have to separate qualified medical physicists from people who want to become medical physicists. I don't believe there is a shortage of the latter. But you might want to talk to someone who's been involved in the recruitment of the former.
qball2 said:Choppy, can you explain this? If you are so understaffed why don't you hire someone? This shouldn't be a problem if the market is over-saturated (and it is an indisputable fact that it is). And if you're not looking to hire someone then that job doesn't really exist as far as the market is concerned.
NeoDevin said:They can't hire anyone without the money to do so. The money is not there because of the economy. Once the economy recovers, and the budget is increased, one would expect that they will fill the position.
AtomicPile said:I would like to know who "they" are. I always worry when someone puts in an ambiguous descriptor like "they".
AtomicPile said:Do you work with Choppy? Your post implies that you have some kind of intimate knowledge of Choppy's workplace environment and the future hiring practice of Choppy's workplace.
AtomicPile said:I would add that I have the CV's of at least 20 medical physicists seeking work. Some of them have been board certified for over 5 and 10 years.
sanadan said:So, I have an undergrad in EE from U of Alberta, and I have thought a lot about going back to school for a more physics centric education. Obviously medical physics is an interesting option, but I am unsure exactly how much upgrading I may require to get accepted into an MSC program. FYI, if I do go back to school, I will likely go somewhere other than UofA or UofC.
For the past 9 years I have been doing industrial automation, which is pretty far removed from any of the signal processing or electromagnetics classes that I took within my degree.
sanadan said:Well, it's not that I am anti-UofA or UofC, but, I didn't realize they were both so highly regarded in this regard and primarily my reason for discounting both is that I have lived in Alberta my entire life and experiencing something new and gaining additional perspective on the world is appealing to me.
Sounds like I shouldn't discount them too early though. If I needed to do some physics upgrading, which is what I suspected, what classes are most likely needed? I am doing some self directed learning atm to refresh myself in certain areas and although I am currently mostly refreshing I am also interested in learning something new. For new things I have considered learning Lagrangian mechanics and then parlaying that into Quantum Mechanics, but I am honestly floundering a bit at the moment.