ARUN KRISHNARAJ, MD, MPH, FACR
Dr. Krishnaraj is an Associate Professor of Radiology and Medical Imaging at the University of Virginia, where he serves as Vice Chair for Quality and Safety, Director of the Division of Body Imaging, and Director of Body Procedures.
Dr. Krishnaraj is a recognized leader within organized medicine. Notably, he is among the youngest-ever elected member of the Board of Chancellors of the American College of Radiology, President of the Virginia Radiological Society, and Vice President of the International Society of Computed Tomography. He is the recipient of the prestigious American Medical Association Foundation Excellence in Medicine Leadership award and the University of Virginia Dean’s Award for Clinical Excellence, as well as being featured as a “ChangeMaker” by the American College of Radiology for leading efforts toward greater patient-centered care.
Dr. Krishnaraj completed his residency at the University of North Carolina, where he served as a chief resident before pursuing fellowship training in abdominal imaging and imaging informatics at Massachusetts General Hospital. He completed all his formal education at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, receiving an undergraduate degree in health policy with distinction, a medical degree where he was elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society, and a master's of Public Health where he was elected to the Alpha Epsilon Delta Honor Society.
MITCHELL ROONEY, MS, FACR
Mr. Randall completed his undergraduate degree in physics at California State University Los Angeles and graduate degree in medical physics at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He is board certified in both Therapeutic and Diagnostic Radiological Physics.
The early part of his career was devoted to diagnostic radiologic physics. He was the first Regional Director of Medical Physics for Southern California Permanente Medical Group. His group developed acceptance testing and commissioning protocols for diagnostic imaging equipment.
Mr. Randall and family moved to the San Francisco area in 1980. He established a medical physics consulting practice that provided both diagnostic and therapy physics services. He commissioned the first digital linear accelerator installed in the US. Currently, Mr. Randall lives in Williamsburg Virginia and is a medical physics consultant.
Mr. Randall serves as a medical physics reviewer for the ACR ROPA program. He is a member of the American College of Radiology, Virginia Radiologic Society, American Association of Physicists in Medicine, and American Society for Radiation Oncology.
TIMOTHY ROONEY, MD, FACR
Dr. Rooney spent his early career flying for the U.S. Navy. He graduated from Dartmouth Medical School in 2001 and returned to the Navy for internship and residency at Naval Medical Center San Diego. After tours at both regional hospitals and large teaching centers, he retired from the Navy as a Commander. He practiced radiology and led the breast imaging section in Landstuhl, Germany, working for the U.S. Army. After returning to the US, and after a fellowship in breast imaging, he worked as a breast imager at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center in New Hampshire, directed the department global health program, and served as the assistant program director. In 2021, he came to Virginia as an Associate Professor and Chief of Breast Imaging at UVA. His clinical interests and research involvement include global health, prone and supine breast MRI, contrast mammography, and image-guided breast intervention.
Dr. Rooney continues to be very involved in global health and travels often to teach fellows and residents in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania in east Africa. Dr. Rooney is a member of the American College of Radiology, the Virginia Radiological Society, The Society of Breast Imaging, and The Radiological Society of North America.
ACR Fellowship is awarded to members of the College in good standing who have demonstrated service to ACR; evidenced significant accomplishments in scientific or clinical research in the field of radiology; made significant contributions to literature; and/or provided outstanding work as a teacher of radiology. Only 10 percent of College members have been awarded this honor.
Fellowship is awarded to diagnostic radiologists, radiation oncologists, interventional radiologists, medical physicists, and nuclear medicine physicians at the Convocation held during the ACR annual meeting.
Learn more about Fellowship process »
The degree of Fellow of the American College of Radiology has been conferred on the members listed below who have been approved and elected by the ACR Board of Chancellors.
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