Programs Should I Pursue a Medical Physics Masters or PhD in the U.S.?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the decision between applying for a master's or PhD program in medical physics in the U.S. for someone with a master's degree in medical physics from India and relevant internship experience. Key points include the competitive nature of the applicant's background, with a CGPA of 3.62 in undergraduate studies and 3.2 in the master's program. Statistics indicate that approximately half of MSc graduates secure residency or junior physicist positions, while PhD graduates have a higher success rate in obtaining residencies. The applicant is considering several universities, including UT Houston and UCLA, and is preparing to take the GRE and TOEFL. The insights provided suggest that the applicant would be competitive in the MSc pool due to their previous education and experience.
Ranjithakh
Hello
I have a masters degree in medical physics from India. I recently moved to the United States and I'm planning to apply to medical physics graduate schools in the U.S. I am confused if i should apply for masters program or Phd? I'm interested in clinical medical physics. Are there good chances for m.s. graduates to get into residency?
I have cgpa of 3.62 in my undergrad and 3.2 in masters. I have also done a one-year internship in a radiation oncology department.
I'm yet to write GRE and TOEFL and looking forward to apply to UT Houston ,UT San Antonio , LSU, UCLA, Duke, University of Indiana and University of Chicago
Awaiting your valuable guidance and suggestions
Thank you very much
 
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You can look at this CAMPEP report from some general statistics. It seems about half of the MSc graduates are going on into either a residency or a junior physicist position, and another ~13-25% stay in for the PhD. PhD graduates tend to be a little more successful in moving on into residencies. Informally I think this is often because PhD graduates can either help to push academic projects forward, or simply because they've been in the game longer they tend to be able to push clinical projects forward faster too.

Having already done a medical physics degree in India and an internship already, you'd very likely be on the more competitive side of the MSc pool if you went that route.
 
Thank you very much . Really helped to give me an insight.
 
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