Positions

July 22, 2008

Bioinformatics Pioneer Will Lead New Initiatives at Emory University

WEBWIRE – Monday, July 21, 2008

Joel H. Saltz, MD, PhD, a pioneer in the fields of high-performance computing and biomedical informatics, will join Emory University’s Woodruff Health Sciences Center in September as director of the Center for Comprehensive Informatics and as Emory Healthcare’s Chief Medical Information Officer. The announcement was made by Fred Sanfilippo, MD, PhD, Emory executive vice president for health affairs, CEO of the Woodruff Health Sciences Center and chairman of Emory Healthcare.

Saltz will help develop and lead new initiatives that are expected to fuel scientific discovery in health and medicine and to empower more precise and scientifically informed decision-making in patient care, says Sanfilippo.

Saltz currently serves as professor and chair of the Department of Biomedical Informatics and professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at The Ohio State University (OSU), Davis Endowed Chair of Cancer at OSU, and a senior fellow of the Ohio Supercomputer Center. Prior to coming to OSU, Saltz was professor of pathology and informatics in the Department of Pathology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Maryland.

With more than $4.7 million in National Institutes of Health funding and some $70 million in total active grant funding, Saltz has more than 325 publications and 70 invited presentations to his credit. He is trained both as a computer scientist and as a medical scientist. He received his MD and his PhD (computer science) degrees at Duke University. He completed a residency in clinical pathology at Johns Hopkins University and is a board-certified clinical pathologist.

As chief medical information officer for Emory Healthcare, Saltz will direct strategic planning and implementation of the comprehensive Emory Medical Information Enterprise. He will guide recruitment, research and resource allocation for informatics programs across academic departments. Additionally, he will lead the further development of Emory’s external partnerships in bioinformatics, including those with the Georgia Institute of Technology, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, Morehouse School of Medicine, the Atlanta Veterans Affairs Medical Center, the Georgia Research Alliance and the Georgia Cancer Coalition.

"Dr. Saltz will help us achieve our vision of transforming health and healing by applying computer science to the overarching challenges facing the biological and biomedical sciences" says Sanfilippo. "He will accelerate our already outstanding momentum in biomedical research as we continue to increase the quality of care we provide to our patients and their families. His addition to our faculty is a significant step forward toward our goal of being the 21st century model of an academic health sciences and health services center"

Among his many noteworthy achievements, Saltz has been a leader in the cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid (caBIG), an initiative of the National Cancer Institute Center for Biomedical Informatics and Information Technology. The initiative helps cancer researchers, clinicians and patients share relevant data and information, speed translation of new cancer diagnostics and therapies from the laboratory to the community and help fully realize the potential of predictive health. Saltz has spearheaded other groundbreaking biomedical information projects in cardiovascular medicine, clinical research and imaging. While at Johns Hopkins in 1996, he created prototypes for the first virtual microscope software.

The field of bioinformatics uses computer technology to analyze and interpret a wealth of biological data generated from fundamental research and translates that information into the knowledge necessary to develop medical innovations. Biomedical informatics will enhance established and emerging Emory programs in the neurosciences, predictive health, computational and life sciences, transplantation, global health, vaccines and inflammation, regenerative medicine, respiratory health, cardiovascular health, cancer and clinical trials.

February 20, 2008

University of Utah School of Medicine - Faculty position - Imaging informatics

The Department of Pathology at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City is seeking a highly qualified pathologist or clinical laboratory scientist with expertise in pathology imaging informatics.  This will be a faculty position with rank commensurate with accomplishments and experience.  Surgical pathologists are particularly invited to apply, but other backgrounds in anatomic and/or clinical pathology will be considered.  This position will work closely with the IT Department at ARUP Laboratories to design and build imaging infrastructure to support diagnostic and research needs. The successful candidate will also participate in academic research, teaching, and clinical service.  Board certification/eligibility (as applicable) is required, and fellowship training is desirable.

The Department of Pathology is responsible for a large volume of image-associated testing from the University of Utah Hospital and the Huntsman Cancer Hospital, as well as its national reference laboratory, ARUP. This included diagnostic testing in surgical pathology, cytopathology, cytogenetics, and other areas.

Interested applicants should forward their curricula vitae and names of three references to:

Brian Jackson, MD
Department of Pathology, University of Utah
c/o ARUP Laboratories
500 Chipeta Way
Salt Lake City, UT 84108

brian.jackson@aruplab.com

The University of Utah is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer. Women and minorities are encouraged to apply.

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