ӰԺ Department of Radiology Informatics Section
The Department of Radiology Informatics Section is responsible for strategic planning, implementation, and ongoing operation of information systems in the department. Informatics faculty conduct basic and applied research in the application of information technology to medicine, and provide education to medical students and graduate students in medical informatics.
The Department of Radiology Informatics Section — together with the Decision Systems and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee — founded the Medical Informatics and Decision Science (MIDAS) Consortium. Since 1995, the MIDAS Consortium has conducted research and supported education in medical informatics and decision science.
Meet Our Team
Andrew S. Nencka, PhD
Associate Professor; Associate Director, Center for Imaging Research (CIR); Section of Imaging Research, Division of Imaging Sciences
George W. Vallillee
Director of Imaging Informatics
Informatics Research
Areas of Interest
- Next-generation RIS and PACS
- Knowledge representation
- Indexing and retrieval of images and metadata
- Cost-effective use of diagnostic medical imaging procedures
- Probabilistic reasoning: Bayesian networks and decision-theoretic planning
- Internet-based systems and computer-supported collaborative work
Information Technology
The Information Technology Team plans, implements, and provides operational support for the Department of Radiology's clinical information systems.
Radiology Information System (RIS)Our team at Froedtert Hospital currently uses the Radiant RIS from Epic Systems to manage order entry, patient scheduling, exam and film tracking, reporting, and billing.
Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS)
The team has implemented the McKesson Horizon Medical Imaging PACS, which provides state-of-the-art image storage and display functionality. Currently, all imaging examinations performed in the department — except mammography — are stored on PACS.
All examinations from January 2003 forward are maintained in "active" memory on a Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks (RAID) server.
Integration with Enterprise Systems
The department supports interfaces of its systems with enterprise-wide clinical information system for order entry, results reporting, laboratory results, and inpatient and outpatient medical records.