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Department Chair Health Informatics and Data Science; Tenured/Tenure-Track, Associate/Full Prof...

Employer
Loyola University Chicago
Location
Maywood-Health Sciences Campus

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Job Details

Job Title:

Department Chair Health Informatics and Data Science; Tenured/Tenure-Track, Associate/Full Professor

Position Title:

Department Chair Health Informatics and Data Science; Tenured/Tenure-Track, Associate/Full Professor

Job Category:

University Faculty

Job Type:

Full-Time

FLSA Status:

Exempt

Campus:

Maywood-Health Sciences Campus

Location Code:

HEALTH INFORMATICS & DATA SCI

Department Name:

HEALTH INFORMATICS & DATA SCI

Is this split and/or fully grant funded? :

No

Duties and Responsibilities:

Loyola University Chicago’s Parkinson Faculty are Called to Be Health Entrepreneurs. Join Us.
Loyola University Chicago (LUC), Parkinson School of Health Sciences and Public Health invites applications for a full-time, tenured/tenure-track position at the rank of Associate or Full Professor, to assume the role of Department Chair in the Department of Health Informatics and Data Science.
About Us:
Loyola University Chicago’s Parkinson School of Health Sciences and Public Health is an innovative new school committed to applying an entrepreneurial philosophy of educational excellence, research, and service as a means to achieve the goals of improving human potential through health sciences and the promotion of health equity. Parkinson graduates put their knowledge and skills to work in the public, private, and non-governmental organization sectors in areas such as healthcare systems and services, public health, and education.
Through four areas of study (Applied Health Sciences, Healthcare Administration, Health Informatics and Data Science, and Public Health Sciences), faculty teach, challenge, and mentor undergraduate and graduate students, as well as career professionals. We emphasize inter-disciplinary learning, collaboration, and care for communities, while maintaining a focus on better understanding all the social determinants of health. Our faculty pursue a range of scholarly research that incorporates systems- and design-thinking which translates into sustainable, scalable solutions to advance knowledge and improve health and the delivery of care.
Parkinson is the academic home for Loyola’s participation in the Institute for Translational Medicine (ITM). The ITM is a Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) partnership between the University of Chicago and Rush in collaboration with Advocate Health Care, the Illinois Institute of Technology, Loyola University Chicago, and NorthShore University Health System that is fueled by almost $35 million in grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and its National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS). The ITM is part of the national network of more than 60 NIH-supported CTSA sites working on clinical informatics innovation and accelerating the time it takes to develop and implement new treatments and health innovation into practice.
Parkinson faculty collaborate in health informatics and data science research with the: Loyola University Health System (a member of Trinity Health, a not-for-profit Catholic health system operating 93 hospitals in 22 states); Chicago Area Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Network (CAPriCORN) and PCORNet; Veterans Health Administration, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital; U.S. Food and Drug Administration; and various health foundations.
There has never been a more important time to build a new inter-disciplinary health sciences and public health school. Parkinson faculty are called to develop the next generation of healthcare leaders who will drive change and expand knowledge in the service of humanity through learning, justice, and faith. Learn more about Parkinson School and Chicago’s Jesuit Catholic University, visit https://www.luc.edu/parkinson/.

About the Department:
Parkinson is the University’s 14th and newest school, which opened in July 2019 with nearly 500 undergraduate and graduate students. The Health Informatics and Data Science department is home to two new Masters and Certificate Programs in Health Informatics, the first of several new programs planned.
The department is located on Loyola’s Health Sciences Campus in Chicago’s western suburbs at the Center for Translational Research and Education (CTRE). This state-of-the-art facility brings together the Stritch School of Medicine, Marcella Niehoff School of Nursing, The Graduate School, and Loyola University Health System on an exciting cooperative journey with one unified goal—the rapid translation of fundamental science discoveries into real treatments for human health.
Parkinson is also the home for a $25 million endowed Center for Health Outcomes and Informatics Research (CHOIR) with the mission of enhancing collaborative research across campuses on health outcomes and equity research. CHOIR is stewarded by the department, and the candidate will have an opportunity to guide or direct CHOIR. Additional CHOIR activities include directing intramural pilot awards, leading an educational seminar series, and providing resources for training students and faculty.
Duties and Responsibilities:
Departmental chairpersons are the academic leaders and administrative heads of their departments and report to the Dean of the Parkinson School. As such, they implement University, school, college, and departmental policies and regulations within their departments.
As academic leaders, they are responsible for establishing departmental goals, promoting excellence in teaching, research, professional practice and service, encouraging and stimulating faculty members in professional development, providing educational advising for students, obtaining appropriate resources, and establishing a climate of collegiality in which matters of concern to faculty and their department, school/ college, and the University may be discussed and acted upon. As administrative heads, departmental chairpersons promote professional excellence, steward accreditation for their programs where appropriate and foster academic freedom within their departments.
The Department Chair will oversee a small, but growing group of faculty members. The Department Chairperson is a combined administrative and research/teaching position with a twelve (12) month faculty contract. The Department Chairperson reports to the Dean and assumes responsibility for the administration of the department. Promoting the development of new courses in the candidate’s area of expertise is expected. Applicants will pursue and maintain an active program of research and engage in department, school, and university service. The candidate is expected to mentor junior faculty members, in addition to undergraduate and graduate students in research.
The candidate must be willing to support Loyola’s mission in general and the goals of a Jesuit Catholic education in particular. The candidate is expected to be highly collaborative supporting development of programs and projects across campuses, departments and disciplines. Within the Parkinson School, Departmental Chairs serve on the school’s administrative leadership team contributing to the establishment of school goals, priorities, policies and procedures; inter-disciplinary collaborations both across the School and within Loyola University; community engagement; and a climate of diversity, equity and inclusion.

Qualifications:

Candidates must possess a doctoral degree and significant work experience in biomedical/health informatics from any of the following disciplines: computer science, computer engineering, biomedical informatics, applied mathematics, biostatistics, medicine, nursing, health services research, clinical epidemiology, public health or related field.
Candidates must have a nationally/internationally recognized health informatics research program with a distinguishable publication and funding record and demonstrated excellence in teaching and mentorship at the undergraduate and/or graduate levels. The successful candidate must be able to meet rank and tenure guidelines at the Associate Professor or Professor level.
Candidates with demonstrated administrative experience, including people development and mentorship and fiscal budget management, are preferred.
We encourage candidates with expertise in large data analytics from electronic health records (EHR), picture archive and communication systems, administrative data, social media and mobile technologies, or other large data repositories. Experience and working knowledge of medical vocabularies, common data models, EHR interoperability platforms, and regional or national collaborations in health informatics are desired.
The ideal candidate will foster inter-disciplinary collaborations, facilitate new grants and technologies, and support department faculty to lead health informatics across the Loyola campus.

Minimum Education and/or Work Experience:

Candidates must possess a doctoral degree and significant work experience in biomedical/health informatics from any of the following disciplines: computer science, computer engineering, biomedical informatics, applied mathematics, biostatistics, medicine, nursing, health services research, clinical epidemiology, public health or related field.
Candidates must have a nationally/internationally recognized health informatics research program with a distinguishable publication and funding record and demonstrated excellence in teaching and mentorship at the undergraduate and/or graduate levels. The successful candidate must be able to meet rank and tenure guidelines at the Associate Professor or Professor level.
Candidates with demonstrated administrative experience, including people development and mentorship and fiscal budget management, are preferred.
We encourage candidates with expertise in large data analytics from electronic health records (EHR), picture archive and communication systems, administrative data, social media and mobile technologies, or other large data repositories. Experience and working knowledge of medical vocabularies, common data models, EHR interoperability platforms, and regional or national collaborations in health informatics are desired.
The ideal candidate will foster inter-disciplinary collaborations, facilitate new grants and technologies, and support department faculty to lead health informatics across the Loyola campus.

Open Date:

11/15/2019

Special Instructions to Applicants:

Applicants should apply online. Questions of content and process can be directed to Dr. Samie Tootooni mtootooni@luc.edu.
Applicants should include electronic copies of:
1)a cover letter describing your interest in and qualifications for the position;
2)a curriculum vitae;
3)a statement of research interests;
4)a statement of teaching and training interests, teaching philosophy, and evidence of teaching and mentoring effectiveness;
5)a statement of leadership philosophy and evidence of administration and inter-disciplinary collaboration
6)a list of references (who will be contacted for finalists only).
Our review of applications will continue until we fill the position. Applications will be reviewed as they are received (and complete). Preference will be given to applications received before January 31, 2021, although applications will be considered until the position is filled. The anticipated start date is July 1, 2021 or until position is filled.
Loyola University Chicago is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer with a strong commitment to hiring for our mission and diversifying our faculty. As a Jesuit Catholic institution of higher education, we seek candidates who will contribute to our strategic plan to deliver a Transformative Education in the Jesuit tradition. We encourage under-represented minorities and women candidates to apply. To learn more about LUC’s mission, candidates should consult our website at www.luc.edu/mission/. For information about the university’s focus on transformative education, they should consult our website at www.luc.edu/transformativeed.

Quick Link for Posting:

https://www.careers.luc.edu/postings/14681

Job Number:

8550391

Organizational Location:

HEALTH SCIENCES CAMPUS

Number of Vacancies:

1

Open Until Filled:

Yes

Organization

Working at Loyola University Chicago

Loyola University Chicago, a private university founded in 1870 as St. Ignatius College, is the nation’s largest Jesuit, Catholic University and the only one located in Chicago. Shaped by our city and our Jesuit traditions, Loyola University Chicago offers students an educational environment unmatched for its diversity of thought and experience.

Loyola University Chicago comprises four campuses: Lake Shore (LSC), Water Tower (WTC), Health Sciences (HSC), and the John Felice Rome Center in Italy, and is home to eleven schools and colleges: Arrupe College, Quinlan School of Business, Marcella Niehoff School of Nursing, Stritch School of Medicine, College of Arts and Sciences, School of Communication, School of Continuing and Professional Studies, School of Education, School of Law, School of Social Work, and Graduate School. Loyola also features course locations in Beijing, China; Saigon-Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; Vernon Hills, Illinois (Cuneo Mansion and Gardens); and a Retreat and Ecology Campus in Woodstock, Illinois.

With three campuses spread throughout the greater Chicago area, students have access to hundreds of cultural institutions as well as thousands of internships and networking opportunities with the city's Fortune 500 companies. Study-abroad programs at our Rome and Beijing Centers provide engagement with the global community and economy.

While rigorous programs of research and study are one hallmark of a Jesuit education, we're not just preparing students for a career, we're preparing them for life. We challenge our students to learn broadly, to think critically, to serve generously, to lead with integrity, to respect diversity. We come from all faiths and ethnic and economic backgrounds, with a common purpose of building a better society.

Recognizing Loyola’s excellence in education, U.S.News and World Report has ranked Loyola consistently among the "top national universities" in its annual publications, and named the University a "best value" in its 2008 rankings.

Our faculty take a person-centered approach to education. They’re not just here to teach students what they know, they’re here to teach them to think critically and creatively and to reach for their own discoveries.

More facts about Loyola University Chicago:

  • Total enrollment: 15,902
  • 80+ undergraduate majors and 80+ minors
  • 140+ graduate, professional, and graduate-level certificate programs
  • More than 4,000 faculty and staff members 
  • 14:1 Undergraduate student/faculty ratio 
  • 150,000 alumni; 85,000 in Chicago 
  • One of only eight percent of all American colleges and universities to have a Phi Beta Kappa honor society chapter

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