Today I’d like to talk about being a professional coder vs. being a professional baby. This is something I’ve seen since I started in IT many years ago. Here’s a scenario: A developer writes a piece ...
50 percent work an average of 31 to 40 hours per week 40 percent work more than 40 hours per week CPCs with AHIMA credentials – unemployment is up from 1.62 percent in 2011 to 5.08 percent in 2012 ...
AAPC recently released its 2012 Health Care Salary Survey of healthcare billers, coders, practice managers, auditors and educators, and put the data in a five-year perspective of progress from 2008 to ...
The Hacker is described as “resembling MacGyver with their ability to wield various lines of code or programing languages, you’ll get dizzy trying to keep up with their keystrokes.” A coding genius ...
After two years of following a doctor around the office as a medical assistant, Raina Diaz was ready for a change. “I wanted to be part of the back end of the medical field,” says Diaz, 47, of St.
“Citizen developers,” who have little to no actual coding experience but are building applications anyway, are a growing presence in the workplace. Just don’t expect them to displace professional ...
To meet a coming wave of hyper-automation, IT organizations need to do a better job of partnering with professionals outside of IT to automate business processes and data integration, according to ...
The American Association of Professional Coders has a new Garden City (N.Y.) Chapter, reports The Garden City News. Here are three things to know. 1. The chapter’s founder is Marianne Amster, director ...
AAPC recently released its 2012 Health Care Salary Survey of healthcare billers, coders, practice managers, auditors and educators, and put the data in a five-year perspective of progress from 2008 to ...
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