the potato one said:
What classes do graduate schools offering medical physics require, besides the usual physics and math courses?
Most medical physics programs require a bachelor's degree in physics or equivalent and that will usually cover the physics and math that you need (including a mathematical methods for physicists course, senior E&M, an intro quantum course, statistical mechanics, etc.). Just about everything else is optional. Some courses that I would recommend (in no particular order):
- senior laboratory course
- nuclear physics course
- signal or image processing course
- senior computational or numerical methods course
- 1st year biology
- 1st year chemistry and maybe organic chemistry
- anatomy and physiology
- an introduction to medical physics course
Again, these courses aren't mandatory as medical physics students tend to pick up what they need as they go, but having a solid foundation in these subject can certainly give you a leg up on the competition and allow you to concentrate your energy in graduate school in other areas.
Will I need to take the MCAT in addition to the general GRE and physics GRE?
No MCAT. I'm not sure all medical physics programs require the physics GRE either. This will vary by program.
What is the difference between getting a master's in health/medical physics and getting a bachelor's in radiology?
This one is hard to answer because I don't know what a bachelor's degree in radiology is. A radiologist is a medical doctor who specializes in reviewing radiographic images (and other imaging modalities like MRI). An x-ray technologist (which these days will often have a bachelor's degree) is someone who specializes in performing the actual imaging - so that would be the person who set the patient up and operates the scanner. A radiation therapist is someone who specializes in setting up patients to deliver therapeutic radiation - usually for the treatment of cancer.
A master's degree in medical physics is usually a professional graduate program that is the minimum education necessary to work as a
medical physicist. The work a
medical physicist does depends on the area of specialization: radiation oncology, diagnostic imaging, MRI, or nuclear medicine. In radiation oncology, for example the
medical physicist is responsible for the proper operation of the linear accelerators used to deliver the radiation: commissioning, calibration, quality assurance, as well as the implementation and development of new procedures, administration of the networks that run the machines. They play a role in developing treatment plans, often giving input in difficult planning cases or checking to make sure that a plan will deliver what it's intended to deliver. On top of this many of them will do some kind of research. Health physics usually means radiation protection work.
For those in the field: Do you enjoy it? Is there anything else I should be considering?
Absolutely I enjoy it! On the "pro" side, you've got a professional job that can really make a difference in people's lives, new challenges every day. On the "con" side, there certainly are easier careers. My day rarely ends at 5:00 pm and at times the job can be extremely stressful. Often the stress comes because you're the guy responsible for getting something new or something broken to work as it's supposed to within a limited timeframe. And quite often you're in a position to act as a mediator between different disciplines including: physicians, radiation therapists, IT, service engineers, and managers. Career-wise the field is competitive too. Completing a graduate program in medical physics does not necessarily guarantee you a job in the field, although just about all graduates from the programs I've been involved with are working in the field.