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RSNA leaders made several major announcements during the 1998 annual meeting. Because the Board of Directors wanted to ensure continued support for radiologic education, RSNA President David B. Fraser, M.D., announced that $10 million would be donated to the Research & Education Fund to establish educational grants. He also said the Fund would be called the RSNA Research & Education Foundation to better reflect its philanthropic mission. The Board announced two new positions—RSNA Science Editor and RSNA Education Editor—to help improve the coordination of educational and scientific publishing activities. Dr. Proto was named RSNA Science Editor. RadioGraphics Editor William W. Olmsted, M.D., was named RSNA Education Editor. Dr. Olmsted planned to expand educational opportunities for Society members and radiologists worldwide by using the latest electronic tools. The Learning Center was reorganized as the RSNA Education Center, and the RadioGraphics Editorial Board became the Education Center Editorial Board, directed by Dr. Olmsted. The Board also announced a three-year sponsorship of a public-education exhibit at Walt Disney's Epcot® Center in Orlando. The 3,000-square-foot display showed how radiologists, using advanced radiologic technologies, would continue to improve patient care in the next century.
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| Dave Fellers, C.A.E. |
In early 2001, Dave Fellers, C.A.E., became the Society's fifth executive director. He had three decades of experience in association management with organizations including the American Association of Neurological Surgeons and the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.
The world changed suddenly on September 11, 2001, when the United States was attacked by terrorists who destroyed the World Trade Center in New York and damaged the Pentagon in suburban Washington, D.C.
Almost immediately afterward, Society President Jerry P. Petasnick, M.D., and the RSNA Board of Directors received calls from exhibitors and RSNA members wondering if the 2001 Scientific Assembly would be cancelled. Some feared that a medical meeting with nearly 60,000 people in one large convention center was an inviting target for terrorists. The Board ultimately decided not to cancel the meeting.
Attendance at RSNA 2001 was down about 6,000 from the previous year, but attendance levels rebounded in 2002.
2002 was a key year in the Society's digital transformation. Members could use the Internet to renew their membership, manage their member profile or make a donation to the RSNA Research & Education Foundation. All scientific abstracts for the scientific assembly were submitted online. Annual meeting and course registration were also available online.
Radiology began accepting electronic manuscripts through a Web-based manuscript submission and peer-review system called Radiology Manuscript Central. In addition, while RSNA active, associate and corresponding members had had complimentary online access to Radiology and RadioGraphics since 1999, in July 2002, all resident members received free access to the online journals.
The theme of RSNA 2002 was "Leading Medicine's Digital Transformation." Recognizing digital technology as a driving force in the dramatic growth of the radiological sciences, RSNA President R. Nick Bryan, M.D., Ph.D., encouraged health professionals to "vigorously and enthusiastically accept this digital revolution in our practices."
A glimpse into the future of medical practice could be found in the infoRAD area through live demonstrations of Internet2 and its role in the future of medical practice and education. infoRAD also featured presentations on how wireless and handheld device technologies are used in medical imaging.
In less than 90 years, RSNA faced a multitude of economic and political challenges to evolve from a regional organization to an international society. During that period, the Society remained true to its mission to promote the highest standards of radiology and related sciences through education and research. As Michael S. Sullivan, M.D., concluded during his 1997 President's Address: "Education and research are at the core of radiology. Without them, nothing else will matter in the field."1
Reference
1. Sullivan MA. RSNA, radiology, and the last days of the century: through red-colored goggles. Radiology 1998; 207:281-287.
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Radiological Society of North America, Inc.,
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