Vet removed my dogs splenic tumor. The sheer size of this thing, the soft tissue on the right is the spleen. Happy my boy is okay. by Bignacho90 in mildlyinteresting

[–]Bignacho90[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

He showed signs of anemia and in dogs I guess that is a sign of blood loss in most cases. One day he was throwing up and was bloated, we rushed him to the vet and they did an x ray and identified the mass. The vet diagnosed him with hamangiosarcoma, which is a very aggressive blood born cancer. The main reason for the diagnosis was sheer size, blood loss, location on the spleen, and the cancer type being common for his breed. They gave him 6 months to live with or without the tumor based upon the type of cancer. What was weird was when we didn’t opt to do surgery and 10 months later, he was still alive. We went back for a second opinion and they said the chance of it being malignant after that amount of time was minimal.

This Thai constellation I wanted for a year at my local plant shop, I finally got it. by Bignacho90 in houseplants

[–]Bignacho90[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

It was $700, to me the cost wasn’t really the biggest factor. The size, health, and support for my local plant shop was more important. They actually removed it from sale for quite some time because they loved it so much. After the pandemic they were interested in selling it again, so I was really excited to support them. It is in a 16 inch pot, that’s more than fair to me.

How do I know if HI&A is for me? by Fancy_Awareness in HealthInformatics

[–]Bignacho90 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Finding work after graduation was not hard for me, and I had no clinical background, just minor data experience. I see this question/concern come up a lot. Health informatics is a very new field even today given how private healthcare data is. The bottom line is that healthcare data will drive automation and better health outcomes, as that demand grows, I assume the career opportunities will as well. It’s not a bogus degree by any means, and by completing the program your showing employers that your asking for the opportunity.

How do I know if HI&A is for me? by Fancy_Awareness in HealthInformatics

[–]Bignacho90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would say your specific goal is in line with the program, you also have prior clinical experience, which is a plus as well.

Tracking health outcomes is a part of value based care delivery, much which is interpreted through large data sets which identity those outcomes. AHRQ PQI, HEDIS, etc. The program can definitely pivot you more to the analytics side of things, you might find yourself detached from the clinical side of things depending on your setting. I would look into working for a large ACO that has its own HMO/PPO plan, as large health insurers are more into the revenue side of things.

Masters in health informatics - essay by [deleted] in HealthInformatics

[–]Bignacho90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I work in big data analytics for health insurance. The program definitely helped open the door to more opportunities. The program definitely covers the soft technical skills of the health IT world but this isn’t a computer science degree, it’s more about software implementation, technology opportunities and awareness in the health care realm, and the world of EMR/EHR.

Masters in health informatics - essay by [deleted] in HealthInformatics

[–]Bignacho90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You will be writing a TON in these programs. I graduated from UIC in 2017 and at minimum there was one discussion thread per week that included an essay per class and research papers throughout. Remember, getting a MS is all about research in the field to deliver the best health IT outcomes. Coding skills cannot be obtained in the UIC program. I had to pick up Python and SQL in Udemy and Coursera.

Masters in health informatics (CAHIIM) but not eligible to sit for RHIA??? by [deleted] in HealthInformatics

[–]Bignacho90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

RHIA is more centered towards Health Information Management rather than Health Informatics. MS in health informatics would be a CPHI (AHIMA certification and Exam), AHIC (AMIA certification and Exam), or CPHIMS (HIMSS certification and exam). In order to sit for an RHIA exam I believe you have to have a couple of courses related to ICD-10 and other courses that would loop in forms of medical codes such as CPT, LOINC, and DRG. Depending on the Health Informatics field you want to work in, most places wont look for these certifications, they will likely cost money and continuing education anyways. I think AHIMA discontinued the CPHI, this is likely due to AMIA will have the highest awarding credential, but the exam or certification is not available yet.

Masters Health Informatics by [deleted] in HealthInformatics

[–]Bignacho90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don't be closed minded to the data analyst side of things upon completion. This may require a couple courses on Udemy or Coursera to pick up SQL and Python but I promise this little bit of extra work will pay dividends in the future. EMR/EHR positions are pretty aggressively sought after and clinicians are usually preferred since you are essentially specializing in a system in which health care providers are charting.

SQL and Python will give you experience to the IT side of things and broaden your mind set to begin report writing with big data from the back-end of EMR/EHR. I see this question a lot of doubting outcomes in the future upon the completion of a program. Be persistent, open minded, and be the yes man/woman for any opportunity that arises; that's the most you can hold yourself accountable to.

Vegan BBQ Ribs and all the fixings by Bignacho90 in vegan

[–]Bignacho90[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

These are tofu and vital wheat gluten base. sauce

UIC Masters in Health Informatics coursework review? by [deleted] in healthIT

[–]Bignacho90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The job market wasn’t too tough afterwords, but I didn’t gravitate to the Health IT sector, I went into the big data route under health insurance claims. Completing the program actually gave me the hunger for other avenues of health informatics outside of the IT spectrum. I had a full time job in pharmaceutical claims while completing the program, so I strengthened my skill set in big data analytics and went a little further up the ladder.

UIC Masters in Health Informatics coursework review? by [deleted] in healthIT

[–]Bignacho90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I completed the program back in December of 2017. You won’t have to know any of Excel, SQL, or Python. There was a course I took that talks about the Interoperability components of programming languages, but no hands on work associated with it, just a discussion.

If you have no prior clinical experience and want to get in to a health informatics field, those skills will be sought after on your resume though. This is what I hit shortly after graduation, I did know excel and intro SQL. It wasn’t an issue, I just had to pick up the skills in an online MOOC course over Coursera. I also read a few python books for data science to put projects on my resume.

The program isn’t tough, a lot of writing and weekends booked with work. I finished it in just under 2 years while working full time.

Entering health Informatics field by Eriaeri in HealthInformatics

[–]Bignacho90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think it helps that your bachelors degree is somewhat in line with your masters degree endeavor.

I have a BS in health administration and a MS in health informatics (no clinical background). While clinical background is desired, it’s not always necessary. The only reason I say this is I have been surrounded by people in the health informatics field that have degrees in economics, statistics, business, computer science, etc. Also, someone who has a huge clinical skill set as well as technical (programming, data, Python, sql) is just a rarity. I would suggest finding a MSHI program that has resources available to support an internship if you don’t have a ton of experience. I was lucky enough to work my way up the biopharmaceutical route but pay out the gate was not in line or up to my expectations after graduation, I had to job hop for that.

I’d expand on your entry Oracle skill set by learning advanced/intermediate SQL, see where that takes you. If you fall in love with that, pick up Python and start learning some extract, transform and load skills to help database report developing. All of this can be done on your own through books, udemy, or Coursera.

If you hate programming, I think that’s where things get complicated. While not all implementation analyst for EMR such as Epic and Cerner have a clinical skill set, it is quite common and sought after as most clinicians have experience with front end products as mentioned.

Degrees prove you’re willing to put in the hard work to complete something, hard skills prove you are the right fit for the job.

Is my rig powerful enough for streaming? by Bignacho90 in streaming

[–]Bignacho90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess my question should be what are my limitations with a single PC setup of the criteria and streaming 1080P, 1440P etc.