AAPM Newsletter March/April 2002 Vol. 27 No. 2

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Newsletter

American Association Of Physicists In Medicine VOLUME 27 NO. 2

MARCH/APRIL 2002

AAPM President’s Column Off to a Good Start Robert G. Gould San Francisco, CA This year is moving quickly with much activity. Committee appointments and liaisons have been finalized with the help of a new, Web-based program set up by Mike Woodward and Sean Benedict of AAPM Headquarters. My thanks to them as it made the job much easier. Appointment letters have been sent out and while some glitches occurred, I feel that with all complexities considered, the program worked well. It is still in refinement and I appreciate the feedback from

members who noted errors when they occurred. Along this same line, Mike’s team at Headquarters has created a mechanism for electronic voting by the Board. This system permits discussion, amendments to motions, and other aspects of the rules of order. Use of electronic voting should allow the Board to move quickly on issues that arise and need fast action. For example, as I write this, several motions involving the Annual Meeting are before the Board. Without electronic voting, these motions could not be considered in time for the meeting. I believe that electronic voting will help empower the Board, allowing broader and faster response to issues.

Make sure you plan to attend the Annual Meeting, which will be held in Montréal July 14–18. Everything about this meeting excites me: the Canadian venue, the scientific program, the continuing educational courses, the social events, and the exhibits. This will be the first Annual Meeting organized by the Meeting Coordination Committee (MCC). This (See Gould - p. 2)

Maintenance of Certification in Medical Physics ABR Physics Trustees W. Hendee, B. Paliwal, S. Thomas Beginning this year (2002), certification in diagnostic radiological physics, medical nuclear physics, and therapeutic radiological physics by the American Board of Radiology (ABR) will result in issuance of a ten-year time-lim-

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ited certificate. To sustain their certification beyond the ten-year limit, physicists will need to engage in the ABR’s program for Maintenance of Certification (MOC). Additional information about the MOC program for medical physicists is available on the ABR Web site (www.theabr.org). The ABR’s MOC program for

medical physicists has four elements, each to be completed over the ten-year period beginning with the date of certification. Once these are completed, the physicist may request a ten-year extension of certification in the field(s) in which he or she was originally certified. The ten-year extension begins on the tenth an-

3/4/02, 1:05 PM

(See Certification - p. 3)


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