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Medical Physics Residency Program and Education

Overview

The CAMPEP-accredited Physics Residency Program in Radiation Oncology at Stony Brook Medicine is a two-year training program. It was established in 2009. The two years are dedicated to hands-on clinical physics training for physicists having a graduate degree. Didactic lectures and seminars are part of the program in order to provide additional teaching of clinical radiation oncology.

Our comprehensive program is equipped with the latest radiotherapy procedures: intensity modulated radiation therapy, stereotactic body radiotherapy, total body irradiation, low dose rate brachytherapy using I-131, high dose rate brachytherapy for gynecologic malignancies, skin and HDR prostate etc.

Residents, under the supervision of medical physicists and other healthcare professionals, will participate in the routine clinical duties of a radiation oncology physicist. At the conclusion of the program, residents will be able to demonstrate competency in all areas of radiation oncology physics and will be prepared/eligible to take the certification examination of the American Board of Radiology in Therapeutic Radiology Physics.

Organizational Structure

Department of Radiation Oncology at Stony Brook Medicine currently has two service sites, one at main campus and another at Southampton. Clinical training is currently provided at the main campus. All physics residents will report to the Physics Residency Program Director. The Physics Education Committee oversees the operation and the evaluation of the program. In addition to regular teaching conferences, seminars, journal clubs and chart rounds, physics residents will have the opportunity to attend all of the courses offered by the department, including a year-round radiation physics course offered to medical residents.

Training

Program Completion Requirements

Stony Brook Medicine physics residency training program follows the “Essentials and Guidelines for Hospital Based Medical Physics Residency Training Programs” as outlined in AAPM Report #90. Upon completion of the program, the residents are expected to demonstrate competency in practicing fundamental clinical radiation oncology physics procedures and to have a comprehensive understanding of all clinical topics in radiation oncology physics. The residents are expected to be prepared to pass the American Board of Radiology exams. For this, 24 months of clinical training and education is provided.

Clinical Rotations

The physics residents work closely with faculty physicists and clinical staff in the Radiation Oncology Department. Each resident participates in clinical procedures and QA measurements. The resident will follow a clinical rotation schedule, and each rotation consists of several educational modules with defined goals and evaluation methods. Competency in every module must be demonstrated, and each resident's performance will be evaluated by the teaching faculty at each rotation completion.

Rotations
Description
Mentor/Duration
Orientation & Introduction to Department Systems
Observation at treatment machines and simulators IMPAC and systems training Professionalism and Ethics
1-2 weeks
Imaging
CT Simulation, Image Fusion, Data Transfer, DICOM
1 month
In Vivo Dosimetry
Calibration and use of OSLD and Diode
2 weeks
IMRT QA
Patient specific IMRT dose verification
3 months
Total Body Irradiation
Techniques for total body irradiation
1 month
Basic Dose Calculations
Manual (hand) calculations of various simple beam arrangements
1 month
Treatment Planning, external beam 3D
Use of Eclipse TPS
3 months
Treatment Planning IMRT
Use of Eclipse TPS
3 months
Electron Beam Planning
Use of Eclipse TPS along with measured output factors
1 month
Stereotactic Radiosurgery
Radiosurgery using EDGE
3 months
Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy
Simulation, treatment planning and delivery of SBRT
3 months
Radiation Protection and Shielding
Shielding calculations for radiation therapy vault
2 weeks
Applied Health Physics
Radiation safety tasks including dose rate surveys and receipt of radioactive materials
3 months
Brachytherapy
HDR: daily QA and quarterly QA
LDR: source assay
3 months
Measurement Instrument QA
Intercomparison of dosimetry systems
3 months
Linac Monthly QA
Monthly linac QA for Varian systems
12 months
Linac Annual QA
Annual linac QA for Varian systems
2 months
CT Annual QA
CT annual QA for Siemens CT
2 months
Patient Chart Checks
Standard plans; patient specific MU and plan checks
1 month
Quality and Process Improvement
Workflow enhancement
Root cause or incident analysis
3 months
Regional Physics Practice
Experience in working in a Proton center
1–2 weeks

Didactic Education

Besides formal coursework, all residents will be encouraged to attend departmental and regional AAPM conferences. This is designed to help the residents to develop knowledge of routine clinical operations in radiation oncology physics. These conferences include weekly chart rounds, cancer center grand rounds, visiting professors lectures, radiation safety in-services, and journal clubs. At the discretion of the Physics Education Committee, residents will have the opportunity to attend refresher courses offered at the AAPM annual meetings, AAPM summer school, and ASTRO annual meetings, etc.

Other Education

Any resident accepted into the program must satisfactorily have completed, or will complete, the appropriate courses required by the American Board of Radiology. If courses are required, the program duration increases correspondingly. Our department is closely linked with other academic departments, research collaborations are encouraged.

Graduation

Upon completion of the program, a certificate will be awarded subject to the following requirements:

Satisfactory completion of clinical rotations as documented in the rotation evaluation form, with all checklists signed by the supervising physicist and Physics Residency Program Director.

Preparation and presentation of at least four talks each year on clinical physics rotations.

Satisfactory attendance in all required clinical and medical physics courses, seminars and conferences including medical physics seminars, radiation safety in-services, chart rounds, and clinical morning conferences.

Benefits

HR

Highlights:

Vacation and Benefits: HR

Office space: Each resident has a personal desk space with a dual monitor computer which has access to patient information and the Internet.

Stony Brook iPhone: Each resident receives a Stony Brook Medicine issued iPhone from the start to end of the residency.

High performance computing: Machine learning and AI projects are supported by Stony Brook High Performance Computing Clusters facility.

Application:

We are seeking candidates with a PhD/MS in Medical Physics, Physics, or related fields for one medical physics resident position. The physics resident will work with a team of physicists and dosimetrists to be trained in all aspects of clinical radiation therapy physics. This position is designed to include two years of clinical training.

Candidates must have a PhD or MS degree from CAMPEP accredited graduate programs in medical physics, or have a PhD degree in physics, biophysics, radiological sciences, engineering, or a related field and have completed a CAMPEP-accredited certificate diploma. Candidate applications will be reviewed by the Physics Education Committee. The selected applicants will be interviewed online by the program director and/or designated committee members and then invited for an on-site interview. The physics faculty will rank the candidates interviewed who will be notified about the admission decision in a timely fashion.

It is the continuing policy of Stony Brook Medicine that all terms and conditions of employment, including but not necessarily limited to, recruitment, appointment, promotion, compensation, benefits, transfers, training, education, and social and recreational programs will be administered without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, age, national origin or ancestry, disability, or status as a disabled.

Residents

Current Physics Residents

Yizhou (Andrew) Zhao, MS – May 2023 - June 2025 (2 Years Clinical Training)

Medical Physics Resident Program Statistics

Academic Year

Applicants

Accepted

Graduated

2023

12

1

 

2022

14

1

1

2020

11

1

1

2018

12

1

0

2017

0

0

1

2015

15

1

1

2013

14

1

1

Previous Physics Residents

Name
Year of Graduation
Current Place
Renee Cattell
2022
Stony Brook Medicine
David Kahn
2020
Karmanos Cancer Institute - McLaren
James Han
2017
St. Joseph's Health
Sarah Burleson
2015
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Elizabeth Van Wie
2013
Radformation
An Ting Hsia
2010
Stony Brook Medicine
Matthew Worth
2009
The Valley Hospital
Sarah Walsh
2008
Health Canada's Consumer and Clinical Radiation Protection Bureau
Tejas Telivala
2007
ProHEALTH

More Info

You may obtain additional information about the Radiation Physics Residency Program by contacting:

Xin Qian
Program Director
Radiation Oncology

Stony Brook Medicine
100 Nicolls Road
Stony Brook, NY 11794

Email: xin.qian@stonybrookmedicine.edu

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