What are the responsibilities and job description for the Faculty Member, Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (NMMI) position at Harvard Medical Faculty Physicians?
Faculty Member, Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (NMMI)
Harvard Medical Faculty Physicians (HMFP) at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC).
The Department of Radiology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, a Harvard Medical School affiliate, is seeking a superb candidate to join our Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging division. All faculty members participate in the broad spectrum of clinical and teaching activities, in multidisciplinary meetings, and in an equally-shared NMMI call pool. The Division performs the full range of nuclear medicine exams (approximately 8000 studies per year) at the Medical Center’s main campus in Boston and at our affiliated community sites. Current downtown facilities include 4 gamma cameras and gamma camera computers, a dedicated nuclear cardiac camera, two SPECT/CT scanners and one PET/CT scanner. The sites feed a common PACS and the studies are read at BIDMC in Boston, as well as remote reading through home workstations. Current areas of research address identification of tumor-targeting biomarkers, lymphoscintigraphy supporting a large clinical lymphedema program, and dosimetry relating to hepatic yttrium micro-bead delivery.
The department will be engaged in the newly announced and exciting clinical collaboration between Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI), BIDMC, and Harvard Medical Faculty Physicians (HMFP) to establish New England’s only free-standing adult inpatient cancer hospital. The collaboration will bring together world-class clinicians to deliver transformational, precision medicine in an environment solely dedicated to defying cancer.
BIDMC is an anchor medical center for the Beth Israel Lahey Health (BILH) network, which includes 13 hospitals, 4,300 physicians, 35,000 employees and covers approximately 1.3 million patients in eastern Massachusetts. BIDMC is a major Harvard Medical School-affiliated teaching hospital with 649 beds, a Level I trauma center, and highly competitive residency and fellowship programs across the range of academic medicine. Candidates should be excited to work in an academic environment and committed to teaching medical students, residents, and fellows.
The candidate must be fellowship trained in nuclear medicine and preferably board certified in both Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine and be eligible for licensure in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Candidates should be eligible for appointment at the Instructor, Assistant or Associate Professor level at Harvard Medical School; salary and academic rank will be commensurate with qualifications and experience.