The UPMC/University of Pittsburgh Department of Radiology is pleased to announce the recruitment of an exciting leadership opportunity for the position of Chief of Radiology at UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital in Pittsburgh, PA. The ideal Chief will have strong administrative and leadership skills and prior experience in operational management. The selected candidate will join the Abdominal Imaging division and should be a fellowship trained abdominal imager with gynecologic expertise.
The mission of the Abdominal Imaging Division at UPMC is to provide excellent care to the community while educating the next generation of body imagers. The members of the division are outstanding educators and leaders in advancing the role of imaging in the management of patients with abdominal and pelvic diseases. The division provides high-level imaging services including state-of-the–art and advanced body imaging (e.g. Fluoroscopy, ultrasound, CT, and MRI) and image-guided interventions (e.g. biopsies, abscess drainages) to the UPMC academic core including the Presbyterian-Montefiore Campus, Shadyside Hospital, Hillman Cancer Center, and Magee Women’s Hospital.
As Chief of Radiology at UPMC Magee-Womens Hospital, the selected candidate will have the opportunity to lead the radiology service at a facility nationally ranked by U.S. News & World Report for excellence in gynecology. As one of the nation's top hospitals specializing in women, Magee combines a wealth of specialty services with a traditional focus on gynecologic and obstetric services. Long renowned for its services to women, Magee is a full-service hospital and offers a wide range of care to men as well.
UPMC is a $23 billion world-renowned health care provider and insurer based in Pittsburgh, PA, with 92,000 employees, including 4,900 physicians, more than 40 academic, community, and specialty hospitals, and more than 800 doctors’ offices and outpatient sites. UPMC is inventing new models of accountable, cost-effective, patient-centered care, and is closely affiliated with the University of Pittsburgh, which has ranked among the top 10 recipients of National Institutes of Health research funding since 1998.