Faculty position, Chief of Nuclear Medicine, Department of Radiology
St. Jude(2 months ago)
About this role
The Chief of Nuclear Medicine at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital will lead the Nuclear Medicine section within the Department of Radiology, directing clinical and research programs in pediatric molecular imaging, theranostics, and quantitative imaging. The role is centered on advancing translational science and clinical care using resources such as an extended field-of-view PET/CT, a molecular imaging core with cyclotron and radiochemistry, and the IQAI collaboratory. Academic rank and institutional support will be commensurate with experience.
Required Skills
- Nuclear Medicine
- Molecular Imaging
- Theranostics
- PET CT
- Radiochemistry
- Cyclotron
- Image Quantification
- Artificial Intelligence
- Clinical Interpretation
- Pediatric Radiology
+2 more
Qualifications
- MD or DO (or equivalent)
- American Board of Radiology (ABR)
- American Board of Nuclear Medicine (ABNM)
- Tennessee Medical Licensure
About St. Jude
stjude.orgA leading children’s hospital, St. Jude treats the toughest childhood cancers and pediatric diseases. Learn about patient referrals, and donate so families never receive a bill for treatment, travel, housing or food.
View more jobs at St. Jude →Apply instantly with AI
Let ApplyBlast auto-apply to jobs like this for you. Save hours on applications and land your dream job faster.
More jobs at St. Jude
Similar Jobs
Physician - Department of Radiology, Nuclear Medicine Physician/Nuclear Radiologist(Open Rank/Track Faculty)
Alumni Network Job Board(2 months ago)
Clinical Nuclear Medicine Physicist
Interview Engineering(14 days ago)
Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Radiology
UMass Memorial Medical Center(2 months ago)
Radiology, Division Lead of Nuclear Radiology
MONTEFIORE MEDICAL CENTER(7 months ago)
Section Chief - Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging
Interview Engineering(2 months ago)
Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Physician (Tenure)
Interview Engineering(1 month ago)