Hi, I'm Chris. I've been supporting Radiation Oncology systems since 2008 — from large hospital networks to research universities to private practices, I've seen a few things. I've also built deep expertise in specialty Oncology platforms like MIM, Mosaiq, RadCalc, Raystation, and others.
Over the years I've supported treatment planning and oncology EMR systems, often leading projects with other technical teams and vendors. From treatment planning system replacements and data migrations to multi-site upgrades and workflow redesigns, I've been in the trenches. I know what works, what breaks, and how to build lasting solutions that improve care and reduce stress on clinical teams.
I understand the urgency of clinical operations, the impact of downtime, and the importance of solutions that actually hold up to clinical demands.
I also consult independently. Sometimes that's helping oncology sites take a hard look at their systems and workflows to figure out what could work better. Other times it's transitioning a clinic from one treatment planning system to another, or providing extra support while a clinic's primary resources are tied up with other projects or Epic.
Either way, I try to bridge the gap between the technical side and the clinical side — because at the end of the day, downtime and disruption affect real people, and getting it right the first time matters.
I hold a Master's degree in Information Technology and am ITIL Foundation certified.
Outside of work, I like to go camping and, well, build LEGO — which isn't as different from my day job as you might think. Whether it's bricks or clinical systems, there's the same satisfaction in taking a pile of individual pieces (or systems and services) and fitting them into something that works.
- 01 Treatment planning system support & upgrades
- 02 Clinical system architecture & migrations
- 03 Oncology EMR support & interfaces
- 04 Workflow & system assessments
Making sure that the varied technologies behind cancer treatment work the way that clinical and support teams need it to — reliably, and without getting in the way of patient care.