Clinical Physicist (MPE) in Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
Position: https://werkenbijumcg.nl/-/vacatures/klinisch-fysicus/10419-02s000a17p
Institution: University Medical Center Groningen
Location: Groningen, the Netherlands
Application closes at: Dec 28th, 2025 11:24
What will you do?
As a Clinical Physicist in Radiology and Nuclear Medicine (RNG) or in General Clinical Physics (AKF) within the NGMB department, you will take on a broad and challenging set of responsibilities involving clinical work, research, and innovation. Your tasks will include:
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Providing support for construction and renovation projects, as the department is preparing for a major redesign
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Managing software use and AI applications within the department (incl. scientific tools)
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Supporting bone density measurements (DEXA)
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Actively participating in procurement processes, prospective risk analyses, and acceptance testing of new equipment in your area of responsibility
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Coordinating radiation safety for research studies, including KEW applications and daily operational support
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Calibration and quantification of equipment for pharmacokinetic modelling using compartment models (e.g., gamma counters, blood samplers)
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Contributing to post-therapy dosimetry calculations in radionuclide therapy in collaboration with fellow clinical physicists
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Supervising and supporting students, PhD candidates, and other staff
Each Clinical Physicist in NGMB develops an individual specialization profile, while working synergistically and interchangeably within the team.
Work environment
The NGMB department of the UMCG is one of the leading nuclear medicine departments in the Netherlands. With its own cyclotron, radiopharmaceutical production laboratories, and state-of-the-art equipment (including three PET-CT scanners—among them the latest Siemens Vision Quadra total-body PET-CT—one DEXA, and two SPECT-CT scanners), the department covers the full spectrum of nuclear diagnostics, radionuclide therapy, and research.
Research is strongly represented and supported by access to preclinical PET, CT, and MRI systems in addition to clinical equipment. The department plays a key role in the training of medical specialists and clinical physicists, and it is strongly involved in the Biomedical Engineering program of the University of Groningen, offering its own Medical Imaging graduation track.
Together with the Department of Radiology, NGMB forms the Medical Imaging Center (MIC) within UMCG. The MIC is central to high-quality patient care, education, and research and collaborates extensively with universities and industry partners nationally and internationally.
Approximately 100 staff members work within NGMB, contributing to the core missions of UMCG: (complex) patient care, research, training, and education. Many PhD candidates are affiliated with the department.
Clinical Physics Group
The clinical physics group currently consists of two RNG-registered clinical physicists who share clinical duties equally. Each has a distinct expertise: one focuses on research and dosimetry for imaging and therapeutic applications, while the other specializes in pharmacokinetic modelling in PET and educational activities.
The group is supported by three full-time clinical physics assistants, each with their own area of expertise—software development, radionuclide therapy support, and diagnostic imaging applications—while remaining interchangeable. Together, these five form the core clinical physics team.
In addition, a Professor of Clinical Physics leads a research group of nine staff members working on reconstruction and correction techniques in PET/CT imaging. This group collaborates closely with the clinical physicists to drive medical innovation. The clinical physics team works intensively with the nuclear medicine division through joint working groups focused on structural innovation and optimization of clinical protocols.
Your profile
We are looking for a colleague who:
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Is registered as a Clinical Physicist (RNG or AKF) with the Dutch Society for Clinical Physics (NVKF), or an international candidate eligible for Dutch recognition (via OKF)
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For AKF candidates: has demonstrable experience in both radiology and nuclear medicine, and is willing to obtain RNG registration
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Preferably holds a PhD, ideally in a clinical physics–related field
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Has several years of experience as a clinical physicist (RNG or AKF)
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Speaks fluent Dutch and English
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Works proactively, independently, and as part of a team
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Is willing to contribute to education, research, and innovation
What we offer
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A 32–36 hour employment contract for one year, with the intention to convert to a permanent position
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A maximum monthly salary of €8,747 gross (scale 14) for a 36-hour week, depending on education and experience
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8% holiday allowance
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8.3% year-end bonus
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Pension scheme with ABP, with 70% of the premium covered by UMCG
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Expected start date: mid-2026
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Partial public transport reimbursement
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Possibility for partial remote work
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Health and vitality initiatives
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Extras such as discounts on bicycle purchase, gym memberships, insurance premiums, and childcare
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An enthusiastic, multidisciplinary, internationally recognized team
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Employment conditions according to the CAO University Medical Centers (CAO-UMC)
Questions about the position?
If you have any questions about the role, we would be happy to hear from you. Please feel free to get in touch.