"The definition of an IT professional has changed from a pure play to a subject-matter expert," Foote said. "It's better not to get another certification for your tool belt, but to go and get some business courses, take some marketing courses or operations courses."
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jmasterj206 wrote: » Are certifications less crucial for healthcare IT jobs? - Computerworld_ and and interesting quote.
it_consultant wrote: » I have been saying this for a long time on these forums. In order to be a truly good IT pro you have to wear the multiple hats of all the people who you support. I have to know manufacturing basics, medical basics (many of my clients are medical offices), lots of accounting, etc. That means, sometimes, the best IT guys I work with are less technical and more process. A shiny new IT solution does no good if your accountant can't print a check, while the cruddy 10 year old system they were used to printed checks consistently. After all your work on said solution, the most important thing in the world is that everyone can do exactly the same (or substantially similar) things that they used to be able to do. Remembering that your accountant still prints checks and needs to every Tuesday is what separates geeks with paychecks from true IT professionals.
jmasterj206 wrote: » I'm not wondering in the near future if some of the larger players in the electronic health record business are going to start offering certifications.
Everyone wrote: » They already are. Well Epic does at least. The hospital I used to work at was switching from McKesson to Epic. They spent a lot of money sending people to Epic training to get certified. They won't let you run their software unless your organization has enough people certified on it. Their certification only counts at the organization you got it at. If you change companies, you have to recertify for the new company. They do have some that count everywhere, but I believe you still have to have the site specific cert on top of it.
the_Grinch wrote: » I am a fan of the liberal arts degree, but is this guy serious? Am I wrong, would you want someone not deeply technical planning your IT Security strategy? Sounds like his hospital will be paying fines when they find out they had a breach and 20000 patient records were exposed.
Akaricloud wrote: » I agree with you on this. Yes a liberal arts degree can help a lot but you still need a strong technical background. Ideally a candidate has both and I feel like that's easily obtainable with a liberal arts degree and certifications.
droberts70 wrote: » This is where I stand. I have a masters degree in school administration, so that should probably be leveraged. Rather than spending money for another bachelors degree (i.e. adding one in IT), some certifications could probably go a long way. Would you agree?
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