Yeah I tried to make the employment letter as close to the description as possible. I also plan to attach the employment letter, original offer letter, payslips, my US tax document, and contact info of my manager there (who no longer works at that company).
Here's the official description (two relevant ones to my job):
- Biomedical engineers design and develop medical diagnostic and clinical instrumentation, equipment and procedures; develop devices to assist persons with disabilities; advise hospital administrators on planning, acquisition and use of medical equipment; and modify and install or supervise installation of equipment.
- Engineering physicists and engineering scientists conduct research, develop processes, programs and equipment to expand fundamental knowledge in the applied sciences and engineering and to support advanced engineering and scientific applications.
So I could either classify as a biomedical engineer and an engineering scientist based on this. And my employment letter kind of halfway matches both of these.
Here's what my employment letter says.
• Conduct extensive disease state research to develop a fundamental understanding of cardiovascular and oncological diseases, as well as current and emerging treatment technologies
• Identify high value clinical variables for future design, prototyping, and manufacture of medical devices
• Create and review internal procedural flow diagrams to understand in-hospital procedural use of medical devices
• Identify competitive solutions and generate novel technology specifications to support the medical device portfolio at <company>
As you can see, it doesn't exactly match either.