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if you want a guaranteed job, where you want.... learn how to program the medical charting apps.
EPIC is a major player and as someone who spent over 20 years in medicine IT, let me tell you a good EPIC programmer/developer is worth their weight in gold. They get a cushy roll and they all seem to have a good time. Bonus is they can't afford to lose you once you have a grasp of their systems.
I work in IT in healthcare at an epic shop, and everyone I’ve ever talked to that has either worked at or knows someone who works at epic says it’s a meat grinder. They seem to like young staff that they can work long hours for several years, so may want to ask around to see if their work culture is for you.
Also, if I was looking for rewarding programming work, an EMR would not be where I’d look for many reasons.
FWIW, I know several developers at Epic who are happy with the job, the work/life balance, and have been there for years. OTOH, I know several people, too, who were project managers, and that's 110% true. Epic is big on academic performance. It wants people who can put their heads down and grind, without asking questions or sticking up for themselves.
Until they burn out...
Medical charting apps is a very good suggestion. EPIC is not a good suggestion - they’re not a good choice for their customers. Contribute to alternatives to EPIC instead.
I would love some examples of how they aren’t a good choice for their customers.
Drawbacks of EPIC
Super expensive - only large outfits can even afford it.
Poor design - a multitude of modules that often use different design principles so knowing one module doesn’t help much with another.
Extreme vendor lock-in - EPIC is very similar in business model to Microsoft in the first decades, basically a mafia.
Lack of interoperability - EPIC interfaces poorly with lab and diagnostic equipment, EPIC actively fights development and adoption of interoperabilty standards.
Dictating Clinical Workflow - EPIC is designed primarily to assist billing, not record keeping for patient benefit. Thus workflows are highly constrained and significant time must be spent clicking about to get the system to let one do normal things.
I mean, EHR is inherently complex so any EHR, but EPIC makes it much worse than it needs to be.