New Chief Physician for Radiology at the Zurich Waid City Hospital
On April 1, 2022, PD Dr. medical Thi Dan Linh Nguyen-Kim as the new Chief Physician for Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, enrich the Zurich Waid City Hospital.
PD dr medical Thi Dan Linh Nguyen-Kim will become Waid’s new Chief Physician for Radiology and Nuclear Medicine on April 1, 2022. With her, the Zurich City Hospital is gaining an extremely experienced radiologist and can further increase its high proportion of women in management positions of over 50 percent.
PD dr medical Thi Dan Linh Nguyen-Kim will take over the management of Radiology Waid on April 1, 2022. Her predecessor Dr. medical Tarzis Jung retires. Nguyen-Kim, 44, is a highly experienced radiologist with particular expertise in oncology imaging and thoracic radiology.
Nguyen-Kim is currently working as a senior physician at the Institute for Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology at the USZ. Due to her proven academic performance, she was appointed private lecturer by the medical faculty of the University of Zurich in 2019.
Nguyen-Kim has ideal qualifications for the institute
Nguyen-Kim prevailed in a strict selection process and was just as convincing with her technical expertise as with her communicative and integrative personality.
Prof. Dr. medical Dominik Weishaupt, Head of the Department of Medical Platforms at Zurich City Hospital, said: “We are convinced that PD Nguyen-Kim has the ideal qualifications to lead the Institute of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine Waid into the future and to strengthen it professionally. Personally, I am particularly pleased that we were able to fill this important role with a woman.»
More than 50 percent of management positions are held by women
The Zurich City Hospital attaches great importance to equal opportunities for women and men and offers its employees modern and family-friendly employment conditions.
The hospital plays a pioneering role in the advancement of women: 52 percent of management positions at Zurich City Hospital are held by women. In the medical departments it is even more than 53 percent, in the care sector it is over 70 percent.
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