[nfbcs] EPIC system

Tracy Carcione carcione at access.net
Sun May 28 13:56:27 UTC 2017


Yeah, that's what I figure.  I guess I might not be able to log in online
and check my results, but I could write the programs.
Or I just bump along with the legacy system for a few years until I retire.

It is unconscionable though, that Epic is known to not be accessible, but no
effort has been made by the company to make it so.
Tracy


-----Original Message-----
From: nfbcs [mailto:nfbcs-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of David Andrews via
nfbcs
Sent: Saturday, May 27, 2017 7:09 PM
To: NFB in Computer Science Mailing List
Cc: David Andrews
Subject: Re: [nfbcs] EPIC system

Well, SQL is the back-end I presume, which would have little to do with the
accessibility of the front-end, -- where I presume the problems are. This
system has been known to be inaccessible, for quite a while.

Dave

At 01:30 PM 5/22/2017, you wrote:
>Is anyone working with EPIC, which is a system used by hospitals?  I am 
>inquiring from a programmer perspective, not as an end user.
>My employer will be switching to EPIC over the next few years.  I am 
>told the first step is to travel to Wisconsin for training, and then 
>pass a test.  Has anyone here done this?  How accessible was the
experience?
>Is anyone working with EPIC now?  It's SQL, so should be 
>straightforward, but one never knows.
>
>It's been many years since I've had training outside my workplace, so 
>I'm a bit anxious.
>Tracy


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