|
Friday, April 28, 2006 –
Austin, Texas – The Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine (SIIM)
welcomed the newest member of the College of SIIM Fellows, Janice Honeyman-Buck,
PhD, Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Digital Imaging and Associate
Professor and Director of Informatics in the Department of Radiology at the
University of Florida. Honeyman-Buck was introduced by David Avrin, MD,
president of the College of SIIM Fellows, during the Society’s annual business
meeting today in conjunction with its Annual Meeting in Austin, Texas.
Honeyman-Buck is one of the
early adopters of PACS and digital imaging. After completing her PhD work in
computer science, Honeyman-Buck joined the faculty of Drexel University in
Information Sciences. Having formerly been a radiological technologist, nuclear
medicine technologist and a
radiology administrator, she soon realized a desire to get back into radiology.
She was invited to implement a PACS at the University of Florida, joining the
faculty of the Department of Radiology in 1989.
Since that time, the
Department has successfully built and maintained a full clinical PACS with all
studies online since 1992, all reading except mammography performed on soft
copy, interfaced with speech recognition dictation and the hospital radiology
information systems. Currently serving as Director of Informatics, under her
direction the department has developed not only the PACS, speech recognition and
high-level image processing functionality, but also a comprehensive intranet
that manages conference schedules, resident evaluations, over-read (CQI)
requirements, internal communications, and procedure manuals. The environment
can support video conferences among the institutions in its enterprise, and
supports a very large and comprehensive online teaching file.
Honeyman-Buck also has
achieved success as the Editor-in-Chief of SIIM’s peer-reviewed journal, the Journal
of Digital Imaging. When appointed to the position in 2003, the journal had
few manuscript submissions and a manual workflow process. In her first year as
Editor-in-Chief, the manuscript submission process was brought online, new
authors were recruited and workflow improved. Since then, the journal has seen a
rapid increase in the number and quality of manuscripts submitted and, as a
result, the journal’s impact factor has increased from 0.689 to 2.098 in the
last three years, with its ranking among radiology journals improving from 68th
out of 81 journals to 29th out of 84 journals.
Throughout her career she has
been active in RSNA, SPIE, and RISC/SCAR/SIIM since 1990. She was one of the
founding members and was assigned to the RSNA Electronic Communication Committee
from 1991-1997. She has published in many radiological journals, and ran a
categorical course on “Computers for Clinical Practice and Education in
Radiology” at RSNA in 1992. Along with five co-authors, she wrote and
published a Mosby-Yearbook on “Current Problems in Diagnostic Radiology –
Picture Archiving and Communications Systems (PACS)” in 1994.
Honeyman-Buck’s first
contribution to SIIM was in the proceedings of the 10th conference on
Computer Applications in Radiology, SCAR90, “Clinical and Research Radiology
Network at the University of Florida.”
Future endeavors for Honeyman-Buck
will be in the areas associated with Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE),
Electronic Medical Records and Transforming the Radiological Interpretation
Process (TRIP™). Her department is working to integrate radiology information
and images to improve radiology workflow. Her work in this area has lead to an
increasing interest in examining how to better incorporate all available
information and create navigation tools to assist the radiologist during the
interpretation process as well as to communicate the complete picture of the
patient including images, physician notes, lab results, etc., to other
caregivers. She recently contributed a chapter to a Wiley Encyclopedia entitled,
“The Radiology Information System and Its Evolving Contribution to the
Electronic Medical Record,” and she intends to pursue this investigation in
the future.
Honeyman-Buck plans to remain
an active supporter of imaging and medical informatics in general, and of SIIM
in particular.
Honeyman-Buck
joins an august list of electronic imaging pioneers who are SIIM Fellows:
The
College of SIIM Fellows was previously the College of SCAR Fellows. The name was
changed in conjunction with the name change from SCAR to SIIM – the Society
for Imaging Informatics in Medicine.
|