Position:
Value Analysis Program Administrator at University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics
Location:
Greater Salt Lake City Area
Work:
University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics
- Greater Salt Lake City Area since Jan 2012
-
Value Analysis Program Administrator
University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics
Apr 2010 - Jan 2012
-
Sr. Applications Systems Analyst
HIMSS
2010 - 2012
-
Prior Treasurer
Intermountain Healthcare
- Primary Childrens Medical Center, Information Systems Jan 2005 - Apr 2010
-
Sr. Project Manager/Clinical Analyst
Clinicomp, Inc
Feb 2008 - Feb 2008
-
Clinical Analyst (Graduate Student Experience)
University of Utah
Sep 2007 - Dec 2007
-
Clinical Coordinator (Graduate Student Experience)
Intermountain Healthcare
- Primary Childrens Medical Center, Central Staffing Jan 1999 - Jan 2005
-
Registered Nurse, Charge Nurse Coordinator II
Holy Cross Ministries, RN
Jan 1999 - Jan 2002
-
School Nurse
Intermountain HealthCare
- LDS Hospital, Adult Cardio-Telemetry Jan 1998 - Jan 1999
-
Registered Nurse
Education:
University of Utah 2005 - 2008
Master, Nursing Informatics
University of Utah 1993 - 1998
Bachelors of Science, Nursing
Spanish Language School, Guatemala 1997 - 1997
none, Spanish
Skills:
Pediatrics, Documentations, Cerner, EMR, Hospitals, Healthcare Information Technology, EHR, CPOE, Informatics, Nursing, Healthcare Management, Healthcare, Inpatient, Medication Administration, Medical/Surgical, PowerChart, eMAR, Patient Safety, Critical Care, Acute Care, Process Improvement, Ambulatory Care, Nursing Education, Data Analysis, Supply Chain, Value Analysis, Bariatrics, Medical Devices, Medical Device Connectivity, Quality Improvement, Clinical Research, HIPAA
Interests:
Road Cycling
Telemark Skiing
My new motorcycle!
International Travel
Knitting
Cooking
Gardening
Honor & Awards:
2009- Cheers Award, ISMP, for the innovation of adding blinded volume verification for Pediatric Bar-coding.
2009- Best Practice Award, PPAG, showing that blinded volume verification in pediatric bar-code medication administration reduces wrong-dose administration errors.