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Why CompTIA Healthcare IT Technician?

We all hear the buzz about healthcare – EHR/EMR, HIPAA, PHI and the other acronyms in the space. But what does it mean for IT professionals? What are the job opportunities? How do you show employers you have the unique skills required to work in IT in a healthcare setting?

According to a recent survey by Capstone, 63 percent of responding physician group practices expect to replace their current practice management system with an integrated electronic health record system (EHRS). And 70 percent of those not purchasing say they already have an EHR that will be certified for meaningful use. Those systems will all need support from IT technicians.

Employers need a way to identify candidates with the right skills to fill these jobs and potential HIT technicians need a way to show employers they have the knowledge and skills required to support the implementation and maintenance of HIT systems, including EHRS, in various clinical settings. That is where the new CompTIA Healthcare IT Technician certificate can help.

The certificate gives IT technicians background in HIT standards, regulations and workflows, so they can understand the healthcare environment. In addition to the recommended prerequisite CompTIA A+ (or equivalent 500 hours of hands-on IT technical experience ), successful candidates will understand healthcare terminology/acronyms, and possess a basic understanding of practice workflows while adhering to code of conduct policies and security best practices, in order to support Electronic Health Records (EHR) systems in medical facilities. The certificate validates knowledge of healthcare and IT on these key topics:

  • Regulatory requirements
  • Organizational behavior
  • IT operations
  • Medical business operations
  • Security

The complete exam objectives are available to download now. Vouchers are available (in North America) on the CompTIA Marketplace ($102 for non-members, $87 for members). The exam is available now at Pearson VUE and Prometric testing centers worldwide. Watch our website for exam prep materials, expected to be available later in Q3.

Comments  (2)

  • RL 23 Feb

    This looks dumb, but i'm going to take it anyway b/c thats how it works in the IT business...  The more dumb the cert the more you get paid.  Mgrs are MORONS.
  • Liam N. 26 Mar

    Actually, not so dumb.  In fact, fairly extensive, from the materials I've read.

    I'm a PA and a CCNA (so, okay, I'm not a doctor, nor a CCIE -- make of that what you will), and I think it's useful.  It's not enough to just be tech-savvy in a healthcare environment (read: hospital), you really do have to be aware of the requirements and regulations to be of any real use.  This is one of the most heavily regulated areas of business (I've been told that the financial sector has slightly more than healthcare, but few people die when a bank screws up) -- and this is one of the few certs that I think will be able to bring a typical IT worker into the fold fairly quickly.

    Is it perfect?  No.

    Is it pretty good?  I think so -- enough that I'm going to be taking the full exam just to be able to determine what would work best for my hospital situation.
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My students were beating four-year college students for jobs. The big question was why. I started contacting companies and found out that certification carried a lot of weight.
— Terry Hand
CIS Instructor, Ogeechee Technical College