Here is a professional and structured job description for a Medical Oncologist (Onco Physician) within a hospital setting, tailored for a formal recruitment layout.
The Medical Oncologist (Onco Physician) is responsible for diagnosing, staging, and treating all forms of cancer using systemic therapies. This role involves managing the complete lifecycle of oncological care, from initial outpatient consultations and inpatient treatment to managing side effects, coordination of multidisciplinary care, and long-term survivorship or palliative management.
Clinical Consultation & Diagnosis: Conduct outpatient (OPD) and inpatient (IPD) evaluations, accurately diagnose cancer types, determine staging, and interpret laboratory, pathology, and imaging results.
Treatment Planning & Delivery: Formulate and manage individualized systemic treatment plans, including the prescription and monitoring of chemotherapy, immunotherapy, targeted therapies, and hormone therapies.
Complication & Side-Effect Management: Monitor patients closely during active treatments, managing acute toxicity, treatment-related side effects, oncological emergencies, and medical comorbidities.
Multidisciplinary Collaboration: Actively participate in tumor boards and collaborative conferences alongside surgical oncologists, radiation oncologists, radiologists, and pathologists to deliver comprehensive, integrated care.
Palliative & Supportive Care: Address symptom burden, pain management, and supportive care needs for advanced-stage cancer patients, maintaining a compassionate approach to quality of life.
Documentation & Compliance: Maintain precise, updated electronic health records (EHR) outlining chemotherapy protocols, treatment tracking, and clinical progress notes in compliance with hospital standards and legal healthcare regulations.