Join the Guest Editor of our upcoming special issue, “ArtificialIntelligence Revisited”, Nikos Stogiannos, as he speaks with Christina Malamateniou about the importance of including patients and the public in the lifecycle of an AI product for medical imaging and radiation sciences. Look for the special issue to be released this December!
In this latest JMIRS podcast, Editor-in-Chief Amanda Bolderston speaks with Megan Brydon, the author of "Lying for a Living," about how her top-downloaded narrative poem came to be written.
Listen in on a wide-ranging conversation with JMIRS Deputy Editor Mark McEntee and Helle Precht starting with Helle’s unique roles in research and academia and how she became a co-Guest Editor for the recent “Future of the Workforce” issue, including advice on those looking to get more involved. They discuss the Patient First Strategy in Denmark, with mobile radiography units as an example (see Helle’s papers here and here) and her editorial for the special issue that covers the Choosing Wisely and Watchful Waiting movement in Denmark. Some highlights of the issue are discussed, including the Shortage of Radiographers: A global crisis in healthcare and the multifactorial causes behind this. Helle concludes with her predictions on the future of the profession from a Scandinavian and global perspective.
Join Amanda Bolderston in conversation with three of our Top Papers of 2024! First is Hayley Gullen from the UK discussing her Narrative, a comic strip, This might surprise you – selected by Amanda as Editor-in-Chief Highlight. Next is Nikos Stogiannos from Greece chatting about A multidisciplinary team and multiagency approach for AI implementation: A commentary for medical imaging and radiotherapy key stakeholders – selected as Top Commentary. Finally, Tracey Lundstrom from Canada talks about her Top Clinical Perspective, Surveying the landscape: First Nations, Métis, and Inuit cancer resources in radiation therapy. You can view all the Editor’s top paper selections throughout 2025 on the www.jmirs.org homepage!
JMIRS Editor-in-Chief Amanda Bolderston speaks with Jennifer Carey (Manager of the CAMRT Atlantic and Manager of National Advocacy) and Mark Given (CAMRT Director of Professional Practice and Research) about a recent publication in the journal, An MRT workforce shortage is no laughing matter, based on CAMRT Health Human Resources data and vacancy rates in Canada, including reporting about mental health and workplace violence.
More from the CAMRT website:
In this episode, JMIRS Deputy Editor Mark McEntee speaks with Dr. Tobias Heye, a diagnostic radiologist at the Universitätsspital Basel in Switzerland about sustainability in radiology.
References:
Join JMIRS Editor-in-Chief Amanda Bolderston as she speaks with Naman Julia-Anderson (UK Research Radiographer, Allied Health Professional Clinical Advisor with Macmillan and co-host of RadChat, the UK radiation therapy podcast).
Naman is the award-winning author of "Structural Racism in Radiation-Induced Skin Reaction Toxicity Scoring". Read the full article here.
The transcript of this chat is available here.
Lene Andersen is an author, advocate, accessibility consultant, and photographer. She joins Natasha Batchelor, a mammographer who has been involved in the disability world through allyship, education and advocacy to talk about their recently co-authored JMIRS paper.
Their conversation with Amanda ranges from barriers in breast screening, ways to improve accessibility and how individual practitioners, clinics, and funding agencies can make much-needed change.
Links:
A conversation with JMIRS Deputy Editor Mark McEntee and Peter Hogg
Stephen Starkman is a visual artist based in Toronto. His work has been shown internationally and published in several book projects. He has transformed his recent experience with incurable lung cancer into a visually stunning new book. Stephen has shared some of the images from his book, “The Proximity of Mortality” with JMIRS with an accompanying narrative and discusses the process of writing his book and his experience of treatment with JMIRS Editor in Chief Amanda Bolderston in our latest podcast.
Join us for a conversation with Dr. Christina Malamateniou from City University (London, UK), and Lisa Di Prospero from Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre (Toronto, Canada). Lisa and Christina are co-guest editors for the December 2022 JMIRS Leadership Special Issue. They talk to EIC Dr. Amanda Bolderston about their personal and professional experiences of leadership, curating the special issue and what they learned along the way. This is followed by three quotes from Sharona Bookbinder, Sandra Kwon and Shaunteque Harris, discussing the qualities of a great leader and their own leadership statements.
Along with this podcast, a leadership-themed Spotify playlist was created by soliciting ideas from our readership. We asked contributors to describe why they chose the song, and a few of their responses are below:
Lelainia Lloyd is a rare disease patient, author and JMIRS board member from Burnaby, Canada. She was diagnosed with Neuromyelitis Optica Spectrum Disorder (NMOSD) in 2012. She joins Amanda to talk about her work as a patient advocate, her role as a board member and the significant impact her JMIRS papers have had.
Links:
Journal article 1: A Tale of Two MRIs
Journal article 2 (with Belinda Godwin): Recognising and mitigating the potential for diabetic emergencies in MRI
Gathering of Kindness 2022 event (November 7th to 11th)
Join us for a conversation with Dr. Mark McEntee at University College Cork in Ireland, who interviews Dr. Christina Malamateniou from City University of London in the UK, and Dr. Sarah Lewis from the University of Sydney in Australia. Learn about the difference between research integrity and ethics, the importance of staying up-to-date with current best practices in ethics, and some top tips for ethical practice in research.
A discussion with JMIRS Editor-in-Chief Amanda Bolderston, Sidsel Pedersen and Shay Kohli. Topics include the need for LGBTQ2S+ education, pregnancy checking and the new Society and College of Radiographers Guidelines as well as the importance of being uncomfortable!
Links:
A discussion with JMIRS Editor-in-Chief Amanda Bolderston and Sarah Hamilton. Sarah is a patient partner and brain tumour survivor and talks to Amanda about her work advocating for patients and improving the healthcare system, what it's like dealing with "scanxiety" and what she'd like Medical Radiation Technologists to know when working with cancer survivors.
Sarah's story has been transcribed and will be published in the upcoming Volume 52.3 under the title "Imaging through the looking glass" (available In Press shortly).
Great news! Our podcast was added to the Top 35 Radiology Podcasts - check them out for more great radiology listening.
Pete Bridge, JMIRS Editorial Board member and Senior Lecturer (Radiotherapy) at the University of Liverpool, interviews his father, Robert Bridge, for our latest podcast. Robert speaks on his role with JMIRS in relation to the four "P's": as a patient, a painter, a philosopher and a poet. Robert recently won the cover art competition for our special issue on Interpersonal Skills - see his artwork, read his poem (and explore the issue) here: https://www.jmirs.org/issue/S1939-8654(20)X0007-5. Read their joint article, Artificial Intelligence in Radiotherapy: A Philosophical Perspective here: https://www.jmirs.org/article/S1939-8654(19)30502-8/fulltext. If any listeners have feedback about the philosophical question posed at the conclusion of the podcast, drop us a line at editor@camrt.ca!
This podcast features the Guest Editor of the upcoming special issue on Interpersonal Skills, Sue Robins, and patient author Amy Ma in conversation about the term soft skills, their experiences in medical imaging and the power of the patient story.
This podcast summarizes the key findings of the article, Relationship Between Emotional Intelligence, Leadership Attributes and Workplace Experience of Australian Chief Radiographers. JMIRS Deputy Editor Mark McEntee speaks with primary author Dania Abu Awwad, a diagnostic radiographer and a PhD candidate at the University of Sydney.
A discussion with JMIRS Editor-in-Chief Amanda Bolderston and author Phyllis Butow about the article, Unmasking Anxiety: A Qualitative Investigation of Health Professionals; Perspectives of Mask Anxiety in Head and Neck Cancer.
Read the full paper at JMIRS.org!