RadMaster Information Services LLC
- Track Imaging Equipment Performance -
About the Software
Radiology Service Assistant and Medical Physicist Assistant are the result of development work done over the last 35 years at the Augusta University Department of Radiology. Beginning with a manual paper record-keeping system, equipment performance tracking has evolved to a powerful cloud database allowing management and other interested parties to access and share this information.
Maintenance and survey logs are accessible on-line using any web browser, and presented in tabular and graphical formats. Using a cloud database means that information is always current; updates to the database are instantly available to all users. The web pages used to access and update information were designed to be clear, consistent, easy to use, and fast, as well as useful and pertinent to the efficient management of expensive resources.
The Author
The owner of RadMaster Information Services
(RMIS) is George David, associate professor of radiology and medical physicist at
Augusta University for over three decades. Before serving on the AU faculty, David worked as a design engineer for the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers and at the University of Missour Research Reactor. He then spent three years installing and servicing imaging equipment for CGR, one of the largest providers of imaging equipment in the world in the 1970's and 80's before being purchased by General Electric Medical Systems. While working for CGR, David worked on an array of medical equipment including special procedures, radiographic/fluoroscopic, mobile imaging, mammography, and linear accelerators. He has published a book about his experiences with CGR called "Can't Get it Right" which is available at Amazon.com.
In 1981 David joined the faculty at the Medical College of Georgia (now Au8gusta University) where he was responsible for quality control of imaging equipment and also managed the in-house group that performed first responder maintenance. David has numerous publications in the management of imaging equipment as well as documentation of maintenance and medical physics activities. He is a frequent lecturer on medical physics topics and served as course director of the Diagnostic Review Course sponsored by the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) where he continues as a faculty member.
David is a fellow of the both the AAPM and the American College of Radiology
(ACR), has more than 20 professional publications, served in numerous offices in the southeast chapter
of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (SEAAPM). David has received numerous teaching and achievement awards in conjunction with his professional activities. He has developed a number of web databases for
Augusta University and Medical Center in addition to those offered by RMIS.