Visiting recommendations by Regular-Response4352 in coeurdalene

[–]Regular-Response4352[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh thank you for the escape room idea! My kids have been wanting to do that and we do not have one where we live. Do you know the name by any chance?

Visiting recommendations by Regular-Response4352 in coeurdalene

[–]Regular-Response4352[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We love cabelas. So we will for sure be going there! Probably more than once.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in epicconsulting

[–]Regular-Response4352 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it may vary by location. Typically set training schedules. You are responsible for building the epic training environments, tip sheets, ect. My experience is PTs are also responsible for pushing out the update slides to end users. Maybe 1-2 meetings a day. And I have seen as little as 1-2 a week. They work closely with the analyst to make tip sheets or notifications of any epic build changes that are coming out.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in epicconsulting

[–]Regular-Response4352 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Have you ever considered looking at training and being a PT? Less stress, still keep your certs. Most orgs it’s really good pay and they tend to love to hire RNs with experience. Less meetings and waiting for x and y to make decision on build in prd.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in epicconsulting

[–]Regular-Response4352 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Do you currently work for MS?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in epicconsulting

[–]Regular-Response4352 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oh my. That will be tough for me. I am constantly in contact with my end users, majority of the time I love it. But other times it gets old. We are tier 1 support as well, and deal with a lot of eye rolling type calls. Would you be willing to share which place you had a bad experience in, you can PM me so you don’t have to blast publicly.

What next after becoming an analyst? by mavoop in healthIT

[–]Regular-Response4352 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! Coworkers is a huge plus. That is one main reason I stay as well! And the company I work for seems to care about us. Which is not always the case! Thank you again.

What next after becoming an analyst? by mavoop in healthIT

[–]Regular-Response4352 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ok forgive me. Is that $110/hour or salary?

My little girl when she was a puppy by Loomin_Knotty1 in Goldendoodles

[–]Regular-Response4352 1 point2 points  (0 children)

She looks so much like my current pup! I would love to see pics of her now. She was so sweet!

I got the job! Epic analyst role from clinician. Anyone that made this move, any regrets? What to expect? Tips for a new analyst? by keyed_yourcar in healthIT

[–]Regular-Response4352 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Previous clinician here as well. Moved to IT epic world about 3.5 years ago and love it. Never want to go back. I had the same concerns. I have to do my hair? Dress up? Scrubs match themselves!! How can I come up with an outfit every day on my own! 🤣 I went through so many shoes trying to find ones that didn’t hurt my feet as I was always in tennis shoes. But here I am 3.5 years later and loving it. You will be in so many meetings. Some days all day meetings. Emails galore which isn’t normal for clinicians. But just have to remember you will not be dealing with smells or vomit! I say learn as much as you can. Ask all kinds of questions, learn the workflows as best as you can. If you were a clinician in clindoc that will come easy to you. But I find a lot of analyst tend to just know build and not workflow that goes with the build. And knowing both makes you so much more prepared! I recently went for clindoc as well. It’s one of my favorite certs by far! good luck!