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Medical Oncology

The Oncology Department was established in 1995 to meet the new requirements of oncology, or cancer, such as coordinating all the different departments involved and creating fully interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary teams. Our centre has been used as a model around Europe.
The Medical Oncology service has the accreditation
Authorship: Vall d'Hebron
Creation date: 17.12.2021, 10:03
Modification date: 21.02.2020, 09:16
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Physics and Radiation Protection

The Medical Physics and Radiation Protection Department is made up of graduates in physics who have qualified as specialists in hospital radiophysics and senior technicians in radiotherapy and/or radiodiagnosis.

The Medical Physics and Radiation Protection Department has accreditation from the Spanish Nuclear Safety Council to carry out radiation protection tasks throughout the hospital. The department is firmly committed to quality and safety, and it has obtained ISO 9001:2015 certification.

The professional activity of the members of the department comprises three main aspects: clinical care, research and teaching.

The Physics and Radiation Protection service has the accreditation
Authorship: Vall d'Hebron
Creation date: 17.12.2021, 10:03
Modification date: 12.03.2020, 09:59
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Medical Oncology

The complexity of the diagnoses and treatments performed by the Medical Oncology Department requires working in multidisciplinary teams of specialists, with the aim of providing an integrated approach from diagnosis to the end of treatment. For this same reason, we work in expert cancer-specific committees and assess each case as a team to determine the appropriate treatment for each person. If you train with us, you will be working with highly qualified professionals and the latest generation technology. Training is backed up by our own training programmes and through collaboration with centres of recognised quality and prestige.

Accredited places

3

Research groups
Document

Medical Oncology training itinerary

Contact with the teaching unit

The core of this teaching unit is provided by the Medical Oncology Department, with participation from Haematology, Internal Medicine, Radiation Oncology, Radiology, Pathological Anatomy, Infectious Diseases and Palliative Care, the Intensive Care Unit and the A&E Department. The Unit can accommodate three residents per year. Residents’ training in Medical Oncology takes five years in total. The two first years are spent on core training, with the following three years dedicated specifically to specialisation.

Residents in medical oncology are expected to have in-depth knowledge of preventative, diagnostic and therapeutic choices for cancer. For this reason it is important that they continuously update their knowledge of cancer biology. To this end, they must take part in research projects that promote excellence in research. They will also have the opportunity to become familiar with the main lines of research in the Department and to take part in some of them. Over the course of training, residents learn to have a critical and open approach to the high volume of clinical studies and advances in the specialisation, whilst always keeping ethical considerations at the forefront of their work.

 

Why do your residency at Vall d’Hebron?

  • Because you will be working in a friendly and professional environment where you will learn to manage relationships with patients, families and colleagues, and to apply the ethical principles that govern clinical practice, teaching and research.
  • Because team work and education is encouraged in our unit.
  • Because we encourage residents to improve their English as it is the official language of the medical sciences.
  • Because we encourage you to take part in each of the rotation areas, in all of the specialists’ day to day activities; aspects relating to patient care and those related to training, research and clinical management.
  • Because you will train in the right surroundings and throughout your training will be supported and supervised by senior residents and consultants.
  • Because we promote active participation in national and international congresses of the specialisation and the presentation of papers and posters. 

Hospital radiophysics

The Hospital Radiophysics Teaching Unit is made up of hospital radiophysics specialists and senior technicians specialising in radiotherapy and/or radiodiagnosis.

Accredited places

1

Research groups
Document

Hospital radiophysical training itinerary

Contact with the teaching unit

The Medical Physics and Radiation Protection Department was accredited as a teaching unit in 1995 and is one of the first to receive accreditation in Spain. Some of our former residents now hold important positions in hospitals throughout Spain. Being part of Catalonia’s biggest hospital, with a technology park that is updated constantly, allows us to offer state-of-the-art training in all the areas of the speciality: radiotherapy, nuclear medicine, radiodiagnosis, and radiation protection in healthcare. It is unique, thanks to its extensive experience in advanced radiation oncology techniques in adult and paediatric patients, along with the scope of the radiation protection operations it carries out within the hospital, in both clinical and research facilities. The department has a laboratory where the hospital’s radiation detectors can be calibrated.

Additionally, the Vall d'Hebron Campus offers the possibility of actively participating in national and international research projects and clinical trials linked to its two research institutions, the Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology and the Vall d'Hebron Research Institute.

Why specialise at Vall d’Hebron?

  • Because you will be at Catalonia’s largest hospital and you will be able to work side by side with professionals representing most of the medical specialities. You will have the opportunity to see complex pathologies and to apply ground-breaking diagnostic methods and treatments that use the latest technology.
  • Because the department has experienced specialists who will help you throughout your training period.
  • The number of patients who pass through the centre offers great potential for learning and gaining experience in less common techniques.
  • Because we are a leading centre in paediatrics, and you will be able to see radiation oncology treatments and molecular therapy in children.
  • Because our training programme can adapt to the initiative and vocation of each resident, with more emphasis on patient contact or research according to their needs. 
  • Because the Department encourages scientific training, you will have the opportunity to do your doctoral thesis.
  • Because the Department is accredited by ISO 9001:2015, you will be trained in handling quality management systems. 
  • Because thanks to the hospital’s ties with research institutions, you will be able to participate in clinical trials and research projects.
  • Because the Department has the resources to finance your participation in training activities.

Radiation oncology

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