Some parts of your job as a clinical
medical physicist are certainly repetitive. Checking that equipment performance and radiation measurements are consistent over long periods of time is by nature a repetitive task. The review of patient charts and treatment plans is typically all done in a very similar fashion, so that can also seem repetitive at times.
Medical physics is definitely a
medical specialty, and medicine is highly regulated. From my experience, radiation oncology is more flexible than a lot of other medical sub-fields, but it is getting more and more regimented as time goes on.
Fortunately, there are plenty of opportunities for creative thinking in a clinical setting. Physicists often help with treatment planning for special procedures (stereotactic radiosurgery, stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy, high dose-rate brachytherapy, among others), and I tend to find all of those cases interesting and unique because every patient poses a different challenge for finding the "best" treatment plan solution.
Many (but not all) physicists also engage in clinical research. Developing new radiotherapy techniques, finding solutions to various clinical problems, evaluating the performance and characteristics of new equipment or sharing implementation techniques, developing new methods for evaluating the quality of treatment plans, investigating new algorithms for improving the quality of medical imaging, etc. are all common research topics. Physicists may also be involved in clinical trials, and the scope of their participation can vary greatly.
What people find personally and professionally rewarding in their careers varies a lot from person to person. Some
medical physicists prefer to do consulting and do a lot of traveling to different sites for as-needed work, others have permanent positions in community hospitals or private practice where they become a regular contributor to the clinical process, and others have academic positions where they primarily teach and do research. Many physicists have a mix of the above responsibilities.
I personally do not find my job terribly repetitive. In the past couple of weeks I've been involved in the following:
(1) Worked with hospital pulmonologists in making purchasing decisions for fiducial markers for patient receiving lung biopsies that will be treated within our department
(2) Performed a clinical evaluation on a new immobilization system we are using after a physician expressed concern that it wasn't providing the same level of immobilization as our previous system
(3) Assisted my radiation oncologist with preparing and delivering prostate cancer presentations to various organizations around town in an effort to raise awareness
(4) Began the process of amending our radioactive materials license to include a new facility we intend to start using for brachytherapy procedures
(5) Submitted a request to our institutional review board to begin collecting data for an interesting case study to be eventually published
Of course this was in addition to my routine clinical job duties (quality assurance, treatment planning, chart reviews).
Have you considered touching base with some
medical physicists in your area to see if they would be willing to let you shadow them for a few days so you can get a better idea of the day-to-day work they do?