RSNA 2009
29 November 4 December
Quality counts. That's the theme of RSNA 2009, the global annual assembly of radiologists, medical physicists, diagnostic imaging clinical and IT professionals, and more than 700 companies that provide products and services. For six days, over 200 scientific sessions with more than 1,500 presentations, 1,500 educational exhibits, and more than 500 posters, many interactive, can be attended and viewed at McCormick Place in Chicago.

A full-day series of sessions will focus on quality improvements in radiology practices.
Looking at the future, a day-long molecular image symposium will provide an overview and update of the most current research in molecular imaging and its latest technological use in neurology, oncology and cardiovascular imaging.

Last year, radiation oncology was emphasised, which is again the case with the support of ASTRO, the American Society of Radiation Oncology. Four day-long series of courses are offered, each focusing on a specialty. These represent the breast, prostate, head and neck, gynaecology, gastro-intestinal and central nervous system. This Bolstering Oncoradiologic and Oncoradiotherapeutic skills for Tomorrow (BOOST) programme emphasises the importance of diagnostic imaging to diagnose and monitor the progress of fighting cancer.
Special course tracks will be offered for radiology assistants, radiology department managers, and technologists. In addition to the expected wide selection presentations on 16 imaging specialties, there will be such unique courses as utilisation of imaging in operating theatres.
More than 30 courses in informatics will be provided. Although EU countries and Canada have taken the global lead in implementing electronic data collection and exchange of healthcare information, there are huge challenges, especially in the USA, to make the process more efficient, reduce healthcare treatment redundancies, improve patient care and make it less costly.

This year's Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE) demonstration will highlight the Cross Enterprise Document Sharing profile, allowing unaffiliated healthcare facilities the ability to share documents and images with any other institution in the world.
Just as RSNA attendees in the early ’90s had a glimpse of the potential of PACS and mobile mammography and digital telemammography years before it was feasible for many in realistic scenarios of these technologies at work, once again there will be an elaborately staged demonstration. The Reading Room of the Future is expected to draw crowds.
One course is missing: how to avoid catching the H1N1 virus.
Report: Kerry Heathcox