Medical Physics is an exciting field

In summary, the conversation discusses the lack of discussion about medical physics in a physics forum and the excitement and potential of this field. The speakers share their experiences and interests in medical physics, including the frustrations of working in a hospital environment, the need for a diverse skill set, and the impressive advancements in imaging technologies and surgical techniques. They also express the need for more promotion of physics and its various applications, including in medicine.
  • #246
Is it possible to work as a medical physicist with a PhD specializing in high energy theory? The reason I ask is I find HEP more interesting than medical physics, but I acknowledge the superior career options of a medical physicist. I still find medical physics interesting, just not as much as HEP. Basically, I'm trying to decide between doing a PhD for pure interest in the field, or doing a PhD for career prospects.

For example, could I complete a PhD in particle/high energy theory then do a clinical residency in medical physics and be competitive for the best medical physics jobs? Or are clinical residencies only accepting people with MS/PhDs in medical physics?
 
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  • #247
qball2 said:
We claim that there's no physics in current medical physics because there's simply not. Go read any radiation oncology paper and compare it to recently published physics literature and then I defy you to claim that medical physicists are doing physics research. They are not.

I thought I put that claim to rest with this post (speaking of "willful ignorance", I notice that you chose not to respond to this post):

NeoDevin said:
You seem to think that because one is not doing "fundamental" physics research that one is not actually doing physics. Applied physics and computational physics (which covers a large percentage of medical physics) are still physics. My research consists almost entirely of computational solutions to E/M problems. Would you consider this to "need a background in physics"?

Magnetic/RF shielding, radiation shielding, and dosimetry calculation are three areas of clinical medical physics that require a background in physics. If you're verifying a dosimetry calculation, and there is a discrepancy, it is important to know why there is a difference in order to know the clinical significance. It is impossible to know 'why' without at least a basic understanding of radiation transport. When designing/testing radiation shielding, it is important to know how much scatter radiation there will be in any given direction to know how much shielding will be required and where to make radiation measurements (also how to position a radiation machine in the first place to minimize shielding requirements). In order to design/test magnetic for an MRI, it is important to know how magnetic and RF fields interact with whatever shielding material you intend to use. All of these require at least a basic understanding of physics. For certain you won't use everything you learned in undergrad physics on every problem in medical physics, but the vast majority of it gets used somewhere. And that is just clinical duties...

For research there are (to list a few): Image reconstruction algorithms, new dosimetry algorithms, MRI pulse sequences, linac design, linac-MR. All of these require a thourough understanding of the underlying physics.

I hope we can finally put the claim that "medical physics doesn't require any physics knowledge" to rest.
 
  • #248
qball2 said:
One side is generally hostile because the other side is generally oblivious or perhaps willfully ignorant. I recently attended a talk from a noted medical physicist who said himself during the talk: MEDICAL PHYSICISTS HAVE ALREADY BECOME TECHNICIANS. There is no doubt about it as many medical physicists are beginning to realize.

Or perhaps, one side takes offense to being called "willfully ignorant" about medical physics, despite being active members of the medical physics community.

qball2 said:
The research done in medical physics should be called "medical physics research", where "medical physics" is now read as a single term that defines whatever research is done by medical physicists; it is separate and distinct from the research done in physics, and that is fine, but it needs to be made clear.

How do you define "research done in physics". If you define away each sub-discipline and applied branch of physics, there wouldn't be anything left.

qball2 said:
Another reason we are so vocal is that many students are drawn into medical physics without a good handle on what it actually consists of.

That's their fault. Some of us actually bothered to look into our graduate program and the resulting career prospects before applying. My graduate program told me up front that many of the jobs are QA positions, and that research positions are more competitive.

qball2 said:
Furthermore, medical physics programs mislead students into thinking physics is the best preparation for their work when in reality biomedical engineering graduates are better trained for medical physics graduate school.

Physics is the best preparation for medical physics, for the simple fact that most medical physics programs are structured based on the assumption that students are coming from an underground physics background. In my courses, we covered all the BME needed, while glossing over much of the physics. They could certainly redesign the courses so that they don't cover the BME in as much depth, and instead go over basic physics. The fact remains that: Given the way medical physics courses are currently structured, physics is the best preparation. You keep insisting (without supporting your claim) that no physics whatsoever is required for medical physics.

qball2 said:
Maybe they haven't learned the Schrodinger equation, but they don't need it.

Oh, wow. One example of one topic covered in undergrad physics that doesn't see much use in medical physics. You sure proved your case that no physics is required. Never mind that anyone doing Monte Carlo radiation transport calculations for their research is indirectly using the Schrödinger equation. Just because you don't refer to it during every calculation, doesn't mean that it's unimportant to know. In order to know which approximations are valid (and there are always some approximations that have to be made), it's important to know where the various parameters come from, and how they are derived.
 
  • #249
Diracula said:
Is it possible to work as a medical physicist with a PhD specializing in high energy theory? The reason I ask is I find HEP more interesting than medical physics, but I acknowledge the superior career options of a medical physicist. I still find medical physics interesting, just not as much as HEP. Basically, I'm trying to decide between doing a PhD for pure interest in the field, or doing a PhD for career prospects.

For example, could I complete a PhD in particle/high energy theory then do a clinical residency in medical physics and be competitive for the best medical physics jobs? Or are clinical residencies only accepting people with MS/PhDs in medical physics?

I've never been in a position of hiring someone, so take this with a grain of salt (you'd be better to speak to the medical physics department of your nearest university/hospital about their criteria for choosing residents).

If you bring some specialized skills from your work in HEP that whatever group you are applying to is looking for, it may make your application stand out, and give you an advantage over someone with a medical physics background. Barring that, I would imagine they would hire someone with a known background that someone with an unknown (to them) background.
 
  • #250
Norman said:
Just to be upfront, I have no stake in the Medical Physics game. I work in nuclear physics and space radiation.



I have no clue why anyone would read a paper on radiation oncology and expect to find physics in it. That is like picking up a paper on nuclear physics and expecting it to be about radar signatures. They are completely unrelated. :confused:



Is this not the students fault? There own notions and ideas are only their own. If they do not understand what they are getting into before they start the program it is their own fault.
In addition, can you back up your assertion of "many students" with any sort of hard numbers? Statements of opinion masked as fact make me very suspicious of anything else you say.




Surely there are multiple ways to go about preparing for any graduate program that does not have an exact undergraduate program backing up the graduate program. Again, I think you are stating opinion as fact. Can you prove that biomedical engineering is a better background? Seems to me you are providing a lot of

I am perfectly fine basing my arguments on anecdotal evidence. Unless you know of sociological surveys of the community of medical physicists and their students there is no hard evidence.
 
  • #251
NeoDevin said:
Or perhaps, one side takes offense to being called "willfully ignorant" about medical physics, despite being active members of the medical physics community.



How do you define "research done in physics". If you define away each sub-discipline and applied branch of physics, there wouldn't be anything left.



That's their fault. Some of us actually bothered to look into our graduate program and the resulting career prospects before applying. My graduate program told me up front that many of the jobs are QA positions, and that research positions are more competitive.



Physics is the best preparation for medical physics, for the simple fact that most medical physics programs are structured based on the assumption that students are coming from an underground physics background. In my courses, we covered all the BME needed, while glossing over much of the physics. They could certainly redesign the courses so that they don't cover the BME in as much depth, and instead go over basic physics. The fact remains that: Given the way medical physics courses are currently structured, physics is the best preparation. You keep insisting (without supporting your claim) that no physics whatsoever is required for medical physics.



Oh, wow. One example of one topic covered in undergrad physics that doesn't see much use in medical physics. You sure proved your case that no physics is required. Never mind that anyone doing Monte Carlo radiation transport calculations for their research is indirectly using the Schrödinger equation. Just because you don't refer to it during every calculation, doesn't mean that it's unimportant to know. In order to know which approximations are valid (and there are always some approximations that have to be made), it's important to know where the various parameters come from, and how they are derived.


I didn't say you were willfully ignorant about medical physics, only about the issues. Your knowledge of the subject is irrelevant.

Anyone doing Monte Carlo calculation is using EGSnrc and plugging in numbers. Are they writing the code? No. You do not need to know physics to perform Monte Carlo calculations any more than you need to know 3D animation to enjoy "The Matrix"

And I'm telling you, from personal experience, that medical physics classes are not structured around physics. Have you even taken medical physics courses? What evidence is there? Well, every example you and Choppy give of things that you do can be done without physics. Every single one. I defy you to come up with an example of something done in medical physics that only training in physics can provide.
 
  • #252
NeoDevin said:
I've never been in a position of hiring someone, so take this with a grain of salt (you'd be better to speak to the medical physics department of your nearest university/hospital about their criteria for choosing residents).

If you bring some specialized skills from your work in HEP that whatever group you are applying to is looking for, it may make your application stand out, and give you an advantage over someone with a medical physics background. Barring that, I would imagine they would hire someone with a known background that someone with an unknown (to them) background.

At my location very few persons with medical physics backgrounds land residencies. The reason for that is that medical physics graduate education is largely irrelevant to clinical skills. They will take you in and retrain you to be a clinician in about a year. The fact that that's even possible should tell you something about the state of medical physics and medical physics education.
 
  • #253
qball2 said:
Anyone doing Monte Carlo calculation is using EGSnrc and plugging in numbers. Are they writing the code? No. You do not need to know physics to perform Monte Carlo calculations any more than you need to know 3D animation to enjoy "The Matrix"

Not everyone is using EGSnrc (though many are). There are many parameters to adjust in any Monte Carlo program. While you could conceivably run a simulation without knowing anything about those parameters, their significance, or their origins, and simply using the defaults for everything, you would spend far more time than necessary (and far more time than most researchers have available) waiting for results. In order to get results in anything near a reasonable time for any remotely complex system requires many optimizations which simply cannot be done without at least a basic understanding of the underlying process. Are you going to use every single bit of knowledge while working of each problem? Of course not. I never used my knowledge of fluid dynamics when I was doing research in condensed matter either.

qball2 said:
And I'm telling you, from personal experience, that medical physics classes are not structured around physics. Have you even taken medical physics courses?

I finished my didactic courses last year, and have been doing research and (basic) clinical work since. There was a lot of assumed knowledge from undergrad physics. When learning about linacs, it was assumed that we understood basic E/M, when learning about radiation physics and radiation biology, it was assumed that we understood QM. It was not assumed, in radiation biology, that we had any background in biology, physiology, or medicine. Anything that should have been covered in undergrad physics, was assumed, and glossed over. Anything biology related that was required, was gone over in (painful) detail. That is why I say that the courses are currently structured around a physics background.

qball2 said:
What evidence is there? Well, every example you and Choppy give of things that you do can be done without physics. Every single one. I defy you to come up with an example of something done in medical physics that only training in physics can provide.

You haven't addressed a single one of the examples I referred to in my earlier post. Why should I bother to post more. At this point, I think you are simply trolling. Until you have something constructive to add, I won't be responding to any more of your posts.
 
  • #254
qball2 said:
I am perfectly fine basing my arguments on anecdotal evidence. Unless you know of sociological surveys of the community of medical physicists and their students there is no hard evidence.

First of all, well done responding to the rest of my post.

Second, I really enjoy how it is OK for you to present "anecdotal evidence from [your] own subjective experience" while complaining about the "willfully ignorant" side not looking at the bigger picture and only presenting their "anecdotal evidence from their own subjective experience."
qball2 said:
The other side (the willfully ignorant one) does not look at the larger picture. Rather, they draw only on anecdotal evidence from the own subjective experience. When challenged they respond with passive-aggressive language with condescending overtones. They are wrong, but they will never admit to it.

Third, why should I respect your anecdotal evidence instead of the medical physics communities' anecdotal evidence?

Fourth, the onus is not on me to provide evidence to back up your statements. The onus is on you.

I think the only conclusion to draw from this is neodevin's: you are trolling.
 
  • #255
For some odd reason, discussion on a career in medical physics in this thread seems to spark a lot of nastiness. This thread is closed.

Zz.
 

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