Moderators: Jennifer E. Nathan, MD, Robert S. Pyatt, Jr, MD, F, Frank J. Lexa, MD, MBA, F
Faculty: Michael Bruno, MD, MS, F, Nicholas Galante, MD, Daniel Ortiz, MD, Ben Strong, MD
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Moderators |
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Jennifer Nathan, MD | Robert Pyatt, Jr, MD, F |
Faculty
Michael A. Bruno, MD, MS, F Over the past decade my academic and research focus has been in the area of quality improvement and patient safety in radiology, including efforts to increase adherence to evidence-based guidelines in the utilization of medical imaging, enhancing communication between radiologists and other physicians, and improving communication between radiologists and our patients. I formerly chaired the ABR Core-exam committee charged with writing quality & safety questions for that examination. Dr. Hani Abujudeh and I have co-authored / co-edited two textbooks, "Quality & Safety in Radiology" published by Oxford Univ. Press in 2012 and the upcoming "Radiology Noninterpretive Skills - The Requisites, due in early 2017. I am currently working on another book on the topic of radiologists' errors, also with Oxford Press, a project which is co-sponsored and endorsed by the Society to Improve Diagnosis in Medicine (SIDM). Prior to 2005, my primary research interest was in the area of functional and physiological imaging in rheumatoid arthritis. My current research interests center around understanding the neuro-cognitive processes underlying radiologists' perceptual errors and the development and testing of various strategies to mitigate these errors. I am also involved in research on the use of clinical decision support to improve the evidence-based utilization of CT scanning for pulmonary embolism and also to optimize appropriate utilization of MRI of the lumbar spine in the Emergency Department setting. I am a site participant in a statewide multi-site IN-CURE project directed toward improvement of communication of actionable findings on imaging, and am part of an interdisciplinary team working on quantitative predictive modeling of clinical workflow variations in order to optimize staffing efficiency in two sections of our department. I am also still involved in research on the use of Doppler ultrasound evaluation of patients with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, serving as a faculty mentor to a pediatric rheumatology research fellow here at Hershey. |
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Nicholas Galante, MD Dr. Nicholas Galante is the Medical Director of Informatics and Integrations at Radiology Associates of North Texas, the largest physician owned private practice in the US, which covers the majority of the Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex as well as other regions of Texas. Additionally he is a member of his groups board of directors. He is trained in musculoskeletal imaging and body MR. |
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Frank J. Lexa, MD, MBA, F Previously, he served as a Professor, Associate Chief and Vice Chair of Strategy and Leadership in the Department of Medical Imaging at the University of Arizona. He began his career in France with a visiting position at the Université de Bordeaux and has been a Clinical Professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and a Professor of Radiology at the Drexel University College of Medicine where he was also the Vice Chair. He has been honored with several major scientific research awards including the Cornelius G. Dyke Memorial award of the American Society of Neuroradiology. He also works outside of academic medicine and was a member of the adjunct faculty of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania in the marketing department for seventeen years where he taught both graduate and executive MBA students in the Global Consulting Practicum. That took him to five continents. In the GCP, he served in multiple leadership roles including: the Spain, United Arab Emirates, and Israel Country Manager positions as well as the East Asia Regional manager for mainland China and Taiwan. Dr. Lexa lectures, consults, and writes extensively on issues at the interface of health care and business. He has authored over 170 peer reviewed papers as well as numerous articles in the general medical press and in alternative media and has also contributed multiple book and encyclopedia chapters. He has given over 2,000 academic, invited, educational, business and Grand Rounds lectures as well as chaired and directed numerous educational meetings for academic, professional and business organizations. His book “Leadership Lessons for Success in Health Care” takes a systematic approach to developing medical leadership skills. He has chaired, co-chaired and served on several key national committees and task forces for major organizations in US radiology. He is the Chief Medical Officer of the Radiology Leadership Institute of the as well as the Chair of the RLI Board. He served as the 2022-2023 Vice President of the and in that role also served on the Board of the Canadian Association of Radiologists. He co-led the ’s Five Year Strategic Planning process cycle which was completed in 2022. He is also the current chair of the International Economics Committee and a member of the International Commission. He served on the Board of Chancellors of the for two terms as the Chair of the Commission on Leadership and Practice Development. He also served for six years as a founding co-chair of the Future Trends Committee for the and was also on the Budget and Finance Committee. In 2022, he began a three-year term as the chair of the Intersociety Committee which brings together all of the key organizations in US radiology. He has also worked on a cooperative agreement with the International Society of Radiology and that has led to leadership programs in Lusaka, Zambia and in the Philippines. Previously he directed health care investments for the British Technology Group International and worked as a strategic consultant for the Boston Consulting Group in their healthcare practice. He is the founder and CEO of a boutique health care strategy group: LSG Ventures. For several years, he was a partner at Philadelphia Ventures-a venture capital firm focusing on high tech medical and information technology early stage investments and he continues to work with start up companies and venture firms in the healthcare sector. He was educated and did his medical training in Boston, the San Francisco Bay Area, and in Philadelphia. He is a licensed general aviation airplane pilot and an avid skier and SCUBA diver. He has raised money for several charities in multiple ways including a 100 mile bike ride for MS research. In his spare time, he cycles and chases after his Portuguese water dog Gabby and his pot belly pig, Pyper. |
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Daniel A. Ortiz, MD Daniel A. Ortiz, MD is a first year private practice musculoskeletal and general radiologist with Summit Radiology Services, P.C. in northern Georgia. As a result of his undergraduate education at University of Texas at Austin, Daniel is a lifelong Longhorn. He continued on to attend medical school at the University of Texas Medical Branch. After internships in medicine and surgery at Penn State Hershey Medical Center and UTMB, respectively, he continued on to residency training at Eastern Virginia Medical School. He completed training as a musculoskeletal imaging fellow at the University of California San Diego. His involvement in the includes serving as the immediate past chair of the resident and fellow section and membership in the council steering committee, college nominating committee, general small emergency and rural commission's economics committee, and commission on leadership and practice development. |
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Ben Strong, MD Dr. Benjamin Strong completed residencies in Internal Medicine and Radiology, with a fellowship in MSK/body MR. He worked for three years as an emergency physician, then as an academic and private practice radiologist. He has worked for Virtual Radiologic for sixteen years and has been its Chief Medical Officer for seven years. He is licensed to practice in all fifty states. |