![]() ![]() I wouldn't disagree that it is somewhat arbitrary but once you are marketing yourself as proficient, you are selling yourself way short. I've worked in a number of organizations, several in leadership positions, & I've never encountered an organization that placed more than negligible value on proficiencies. If you have any additional questions or need more info about reaching out to Epic for getting access to their UserWeb or Training site, you could send me a message. I bet i could continue working as an Epic analyst for the next ten years and I would still fail that Sphinx test every time. However, I interviewed for another Epic hospital a few months ago and I was offered the job as an Epic analyst (which i have accepted) and they did NOT require me to take the Sphinx test. They never tell you if you fail it, but I am 99% i failed it both times. ![]() I've interviewed for multiple Epic positions for multiple hospitals for several years now. I do not know if working admissions will discredit you from gaining access. However, they do ask for your current job title. Since the hospital you are working at is an Epic client, you should be able to reach out to Epic and request access to their UserWeb and Training site. From here, I was able to get access to Epic's training site which had all the information needed for getting Epic Proficient (study at your own pace, complete project/exams on your own time) or Epic Cerified (doing either remote and/or on-site classes with Epic on their schedule and completing the projects/exams on their schedule too). I was able to get access to the Epic UserWeb using my work email account. I was previously a Cerner analyst working at a hospital system who used mostly Epic. As always, speak to your healthcare professional for answers specific to your condition. Safety Reminder: We do not provide official answers or provide professional judgement. r/Medicine: Relates to medicine is welcome here, whether personal or abstract, humorous or serious, scientific or emotional, so long as it follows the following guidelines: Everything and anything related to UK Healthcare r/UKHealthcare: dedicated to healthcare in the UK. ![]() r/Nursing: Discuss the topics of concern to the nurses of reddit. r/MedicalSchool: Medical students and physicians who wish to advise them. r/Pharmacy: Pharmacists, pharmacy students, techs, and anyone else in the pharmaceutical industry! r/GlobalHealth: Discusses the discipline concerned with improving the health of the most number of people, irrespective of where those people live in the world. r/PBM: Pharmacy Benefits Management discussion (employees, patients, doctors, pharmacies, etc). r/Cancer: Related news, stories of survival, stories of loss and everything else associated with the disease. r/Healthcare: Links and discussion about health care: systems, costs, problems and proposed solutions. Is your post not showing up? Message us moderators. A reddit for discussion and news about health information technology, electronic health records, security and privacy issues, and related legislation. ![]()
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