Dosimetrist

2 weeks ago


Sutton, United Kingdom The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust Full time

We are looking for an enthusiastic dosimetrist or radiographer to join the Radiotherapy Physics group at the Sutton branch of the Royal Marsden Hospital. This post will support all external-beam planning delivered by the group. For this appointment at band 5, intensive treatment-planning experience is not required, although relevant qualifications and/or experience are needed. Please see the person specification. The main focus of this job will be defining organs at risk on treatment planning scans.

As part of the planning team, you will work on the full range of treatment sites at a specialist centre. Treatment planning is performed using the RayStation treatment planning system, with most treatment sites planned using a VMAT technique. We have established workflows for adaptive radiotherapy (plan of the day), 4DCT, and breathhold techniques. Multimodality imaging (CT, PET-CT, MR) is used for planning of several treatment sites. Recent clinical development work has included expanding adaptive radiotherapy planning, expanding the existing SABR service, and introducing advanced techniques such as robust planning. The Radiotherapy Department in Sutton has 7 Elekta linacs, an Elekta Unity MR-Linac and a Cyberknife S7. The Royal Marsden has led a number of recent clinical trials which have changed practice nationally.

The radiotherapy physics group consists of 40 physicists, dosimetrists and engineers and forms a substantial part of the Royal Marsden/Institute of Cancer Research Joint Department of Physics, through which we have many active research collaborations, most notably on the MR-linac which was the first in the UK to treat patients.
- To perform image fusion of CT, MR and PET images, and outlining of organs at risk (OAR).
- To perform import/export of previous radiotherapy treatment data.
- To assist with the workflow management and communication within the radiotherapy team.

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust is a world-leading cancer centre. Our role is to offer our patients the best cancer care available anywhere in the world, and to continue to make a global contribution to finding better ways of diagnosing and treating cancer. We employ over 4,500 staff in a diverse range of careers including nursing, medical, science, radiography, pharmacy, occupational therapy, finance and administrative services. We have two hospitals - one in Chelsea, London, and one in Sutton, Surrey - as well as a Medical Daycare Unit in Kingston Hospital.

At The Royal Marsden, we deal with cancer every day, so we understand how valuable life is. When people entrust their lives to us, they have the right to demand the very best. That's why the pursuit of excellence lies at the heart of everything we do.

At the heart of the hospital is our dedicated team. We offer a stimulating and dynamic working environment, a wide range of staff benefits, learning and development opportunities and clear career pathways. There are opportunities to work flexibly across a range of areas and specialities and we welcome flexible working requests from point of hire to support employees work life balance. We are looking for employees who aspire to excellence, share our values and can play a crucial role in our on-going achievements.

For further information on this role, please see the attached detailed Job Description and Person Specification.
- Perform outlining of the anatomy for organs at risk.
- Perform fusion of CT, MR and PET images to planning CT scans.
- Perform import/export of previous radiotherapy treatment data.
- Use specialist workflow-management tools and communications to help ensure that work is appropriately assigned, completed and documented, and queries processed

Sutton is pleasantly located on the border of Surrey with excellent transport links to central London and easy access to the countryside. House prices are a third lower than the London average and schools are excellent.

**For further details / informal visits contact**: Irena Blasiak-Wal, Principal Radiotherapy Physicist.