Psych Post-Doctoral Fellow
BC Children’s Hospital
Temporary Part-Time (0.5 FTE)
Vancouver, BC
The BC Children’s Hospital Oncology program provides tertiary care to families and their children with cancer in British Columbia and the Yukon. Diagnostic and treatment services are offered by an interdisciplinary team that includes medicine, nursing, social work, psychology, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, nutrition, child life, music therapy, and spiritual care. Psychological assessment, diagnosis, consultation, and therapeutic treatment are key contributions made by medical psychology within this team to meet the clinical needs of a child/youth experiencing pediatric cancer diagnosis and treatment and their families.
This fellowship is comprised of:
In accordance with the Mission, Vision and Values, and strategic directions of Provincial Health Services Authority patient safety is a priority and a responsibility shared by everyone at PHSA, and as such, the requirement to continuously improve quality and safety is inherent in all aspects of this position. Reporting to the Head of Psychology, the Director of Training and Program Manager/Director (if applicable) and in accordance with established policies, procedures, standards of practice and guidelines, the Post-Doctoral Fellow provides psychological services under supervision by Registered Psychologists on staff to assigned patients/clients with a variety of medical, developmental, behavioural, psychiatric and other problems. Contributes to departmental and organizational mandates and goals related to C&W’s role as an academic health centre.
The Psychology Post-Doctoral Fellow position is specialized training position. The emphasis of the post-doctoral fellowship position is on continued learning and training in a subspecialty are of service delivery or clinical population. Clinical service delivery is planned and provided in in the context of the specialized learning and training goals of the post-doctoral fellow and under the supervision of Primary, and if applicable, Secondary clinical supervisors. Supervision is provided in a developmental framework.
Key Accountabilities
Qualifications
Training at the doctoral level in women’s, children and/or adolescent clinical and/or developmental psychology, pediatric neuropsychology, or a closely related area. All the requirements for the doctoral degree in must be completed. The applicant must have completed a CPA or APA accredited pre-doctoral residency (or equivalent).
Ability to communicate and present ideas effectively, both orally and in writing. Ability to carry out duties in a timely fashion. Ability to establish priorities, develop/implement short-term and long-term objectives. Ability to deal with others effectively. Ability to teach and provide instruction. Proficiency in computer skills related to report writing and to recording and managing data.
Contact
Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. Interested individuals should submit their most current CV, cover letter and names of three references to:
Morgan Copeland
Talent Acquisition Advisor
Email: morgan.copeland@phsa.ca
Start date is as soon as possible.
About Provincial Health Services Authority
BC Children's Hospital (BCCH) cares for the province's most acutely ill or injured children and youth and pediatric patients with chronic medical disorders, and provides developmental and rehabilitation services to children and youth throughout BC. BCCH offers a wide range of health services and specialized health programs, is a leading acute care teaching facility, and conducts research to advance health and care through the BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute, in partnership with the UBC. The pediatric residency program and 16 pediatric subspecialty training programs are accredited by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.
BCCH are programs of the Provincial Health Services Authority (PHSA) which plans, manages and evaluates specialty and province-wide health care services across BC. PHSA embodies values that reflect a commitment to excellence. These include: Patients first • Best value • Results matter • Excellence through knowledge • Open to possibilities.
PHSA and BCCH are committed to employment equity, encouraging all qualified individuals to apply. We recognize that our ability to provide the best care for our diverse patient populations relies on a rich diversity of skills, knowledge, background and experience, and value a safe, inclusive and welcoming environment.
Reconciliation is an ongoing process and a shared responsibility for all of us. The BC Governments’ unanimous passage of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act was a significant step forward in this journey—one that all health authorities are expected to support as we work in cooperation with Indigenous Peoples to establish a clear and sustainable path to lasting reconciliation. True reconciliation will take time and ongoing commitment to work with Indigenous Peoples as they move toward self-determination. Guiding these efforts Crown agencies must remain focused on creating opportunities that implement the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Mandate.