This selection exercise may be used to generate a roster of pre-approved candidates to address future staffing needs for similar functions in any of the Departments and Offices of the Organization.
IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING APPLICATION DEADLINE: Please note that the closing date for submission of applications is indicated in local time as per the time zone of the applicant's location.
Organizational Setting
The Department of Nuclear Sciences and Applications implements the IAEA's Major Programme 2, "Nuclear Techniques for Development and Environmental Protection". This Major Programme comprises individual programmes on food and agriculture, human health, water resources, environment and radiation technologies. These programmes are supported by laboratories in Seibersdorf, Monaco and Vienna. The Major Programme's objective is to enhance the capacity of Member States to meet basic human needs and to assess and manage the marine and terrestrial environments through the use of nuclear and isotopic techniques in sustainable development programmes.
The Division of Human Health is organized into four Sections whose objectives are to enhance the capabilities of Member States to address needs related to the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of health problems through the development and application of nuclear techniques within a framework of quality assurance.
The Dosimetry and Medical Radiation Physics Section (DMRP) is responsible for quality assurance and metrology in radiation medicine. The Section works closely with clinical colleagues of the Applied Radiation Biology and Radiotherapy Section and the Nuclear Medicine and Diagnostic Imaging Section. Specifically, DMRP provides technical support in medical physics to ensure the safe and effective applications of nuclear technology in radiotherapy, diagnostic radiology and nuclear medicine. It operates the Dosimetry Laboratory located at the Agency's Laboratories, Seibersdorf, and provides a dosimetry calibration service and a dosimetry auditing and verification service for Member States.
Main Purpose
As a member of a team led by the Section Head, the Paediatric Radiotherapy Medical Physicist enhances the capability of Member States to establish, develop and implement new techniques, methodologies and training materials in the physical and technical aspects of radiotherapy, with a particular focus on paediatric radiotherapy.
Role
The Paediatric Radiotherapy Medical Physicist: (i) is a team member for the project on developments in the physical and technical aspects of paediatric radiotherapy, (ii) a technical expert supporting a project on quality auditing in dosimetry; (iii) a trainer, and a knowledgeable adviser in medical physics for paediatric radiotherapy and the adaptation of new technologies of relevance to low and middle income countries.
Functions / Key Results Expected
Develop education and training programmes, including related training materials, with a particular focus on paediatric radiotherapy
Provide technical input to editorial activities for publications and guidance documents in medical radiation physics, with a particular focus on dosimetry and medical physics activities in paediatric radiotherapy
Provide technical and advisory expertise to project implementation on quality auditing in dosimetry by analysing data from the participating hospitals, reporting results to the users and resolving discrepancies
Coordinate and provide expertise to the implementation of comprehensive audits in paediatric radiotherapy by development, review and update of auditing methodologies and review of expert mission reports
Act as technical officer for the IAEA's technical cooperation projects and other IAEA initiatives in the field of medical physics in paediatric radiotherapy, including planning, implementing and evaluating projects, providing advice on the use of experts, the placing of fellows, the purchasing of equipment and the organization of meetings and training courses.
Competencies and Expertise
Core Competencies(Competency Framework)
Name | Definition |
---|---|
Communication | Communicates orally and in writing in a clear, concise and impartial manner. Takes time to listen to and understand the perspectives of others and proposes solutions. |
Achieving Results | Takes initiative in defining realistic outputs and clarifying roles, responsibilities and expected results in the context of the Department/Division’s programme. Evaluates his/her results realistically, drawing conclusions from lessons learned. |
Teamwork | Actively contributes to achieving team results. Supports team decisions. |
Planning and Organizing | Plans and organizes his/her own work in support of achieving the team or Section’s priorities. Takes into account potential changes and proposes contingency plans. |
Functional Competencies
Name | Definition |
---|---|
Commitment to continuous process improvement | Plans and executes activities in the context of quality and risk management and identifies opportunities for process, system and structural improvement, as well as improving current practices. Analyses processes and procedures, and proposes improvements. |
Partnership building | Identifies and builds partnerships. Develops and maintains long lasting partnerships to strengthen relationships. Delivers programmatic outputs and acquires resources in support of Agency goals. |
Technical/scientific credibility | Ensures that work is in compliance with internationally accepted professional standards and scientific methods. Provides scientifically/technically accepted information that is credible and reliable. |
Required Expertise
Function | Name | Expertise Description |
---|---|---|
Dosimetry | Dosimetry | Thorough knowledge of international dosimetry codes of practice; Ability to analyse the current dosimetry practice and propose topics which need standardization and guidance |
Medical Physics | Education and Training in Medical Radiation Physics | Ability to develop educational and clinical training material and propose ways to assess and follow-up on learning outcomes |
Medical Physics | Radiotherapy Physics | Thorough knowledge of external beam radiotherapy modalities, including paediatric radiotherapy; Ability to develop internationally harmonized guidance in external beam radiotherapy physics |
Qualifications, Experience and Language skills
Doctorate Degree - Medical Radiation Physics or Radiation Dosimetry
Minimum of 7 years of clinical experience in radiotherapy physics, including minimum 5 years of clinical experience in paediatric radiotherapy (after obtaining the doctorate degree).
Experience in radiotherapy beam calibration and clinical dosimetry.
Experience and practical skills in the physical and technical aspects of quality assurance in radiotherapy.
Experience in education and training in medical physics.
Demonstrated experience in project design, monitoring and implementation. Familiarity with and understanding of the specific needs and conditions of low and middle income countries in the field of radiotherapy physics.
Excellent oral and written command of English. Knowledge of other official IAEA languages (Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish) is an asset.
Remuneration
The IAEA offers an attractive remuneration package including a tax-free annual net base salary starting at US $84672 (subject to mandatory deductions for pension contributions and health insurance), a variable post adjustment which currently amounts to US $ 47501*, dependency benefits, rental subsidy, education grant, relocation and repatriation expenses; Other benefits include 6 weeks' annual leave, home leave travel, pension plan and health insurance. More information on the conditions of employment can be found at: https://www.iaea.org/about/employment/professional-staff/conditions
General Information
Evaluation process
Appointment information