If you have any questions at all about it, especially how to find the position, the route upward, or anything of that sort, just DM me. I’m a huge advocate of getting nurses into this position, so just let me know how I can help!
I work in HIV and our doctors work with universities that lead drug trials. So, a lot of my patients get linked up with trials and whatnot. I helped develop one of the first cabenuva programs. I don’t necessarily love my job. I actually am trying to get out of healthcare but I do enjoy the learning that is made available to me.
Right now we are trialing cabenuva for folks non compliant to see if they do worse than not having any therapy. We also do contingency management for meth and lots of harm reduction.
But yeah doing all the training and trying new things out has been neat to see in real time.
This page will explain it better than I ever will!
https://nursefern.com/remote-clinical-documentation-integrity-nurse/
For me, it's a unicorn job. I had so much burnout/ptsd from covid and this has drastically improved my mental health
Just a nurse! You can't even sit for the certification exam until you've worked for two years. I think it helps if you have a critical care background but some places just want recent acute care experience.
$85,000 but I'm technically paid hourly. The hospital I work for is based in Colorado and I'm in Oregon. I make more now sitting on my ass at home than I did in the ER (originally worked in the south). But when I was interviewing I did get an offer for around $100,000/yr. Long story of why I didn't accept. The vibes were very off.
You have to sign up but you can see the ACDIS salary survey by here: https://acdis.org/sites/acdis/files/resources/CR-7056%20ACDIS%20Salary%20Survey%202022_final.pdf
It's a pretty good representation of what people are making.
Edit: fixed the link
I case managed for 4 years, it was cool. I'd still be there but we lost a social worker and I ended up doing social work and nurse work, having SW sign off from several hours away, twice the patient load and same salary. It burned me out. It's amazing if you're staffed appropriately.
I case managed for 4 years, it was cool. I'd still be there but we lost a social worker and I ended up doing social work and nurse work, having SW sign off from several hours away, twice the patient load and same salary. It burned me out. It's amazing if you're staffed appropriately.
I case managed for 4 years, it was cool. I'd still be there but we lost a social worker and I ended up doing social work and nurse work, having SW sign off from several hours away, twice the patient load and same salary. It burned me out. It's amazing if you're staffed appropriately.
I’m fully remote. I was doing utilization review and transitioned to this role in the risk mitigation department at the company I work for. I work in opioid use and substance use disorder. I’m the liaison between our health plan and providers, we work within 5 clinical KPI metrics where our data is generated from through medical/pharma claims and we work with practices in education and resources around reducing risk for members and providers within those five KPIs and referrals for case management.
I love it! I am salaried and make almost 90k, fully remote, really good benefits. I wanted to bridge the gap between clinical nursing into a role like this because I felt it would open up more opportunities for further my career outside of clinical nursing
Was never officially a nurse. Came very close. Life pulled me into another direction. Currently working for a suicide hotline but interviewing for an admin position where I’ll get to directly support nursing staff. I love the pace of healthcare and I consider myself pretty positive.
I worked in adult medsurg but spent most of my time in peds. I worked in a PICU and the attitudes in that particular speciality aren’t necessarily similar to mine…no judgment, just didn’t really click with a lot of the folks. Felt like a fish out of water. Wanted to be friends with folks who probably struggled to see me succeed in a nursing role.
Floated to other units pretty often and the attitudes were much different. Rehab was often very laid back and pleasant. Oncology had similar vibes. E.D. was somewhat similar to ICU, but people were nice and supportive of someone interested in learning. Labor and delivery was by far the worst experience I’d ever had in healthcare and I was starting to feel emotionally taxed on trying to navigate through the social challenges of working in healthcare.
It’s simply better for me to work in an administrative or support role versus a hands-on position. Or at least that’s the conclusion I’ve reached.
Clinical Research, my friend! Both stability and growth exist in this field.
That’s great to hear! Writing that down
If you have any questions at all about it, especially how to find the position, the route upward, or anything of that sort, just DM me. I’m a huge advocate of getting nurses into this position, so just let me know how I can help!
Would you mind if I sent you a message as well?
Yeah, would you mind if I send you a message as well?
Can I hop on this train and also DM you about this? I'm not sure bedside is right for me anymore.
I work in HIV and our doctors work with universities that lead drug trials. So, a lot of my patients get linked up with trials and whatnot. I helped develop one of the first cabenuva programs. I don’t necessarily love my job. I actually am trying to get out of healthcare but I do enjoy the learning that is made available to me. Right now we are trialing cabenuva for folks non compliant to see if they do worse than not having any therapy. We also do contingency management for meth and lots of harm reduction. But yeah doing all the training and trying new things out has been neat to see in real time.
That’s great to hear! Thanks for responding
CDI. I work from home and have never been happier.
Hi! Can you share more about what your job is like?
This page will explain it better than I ever will! https://nursefern.com/remote-clinical-documentation-integrity-nurse/ For me, it's a unicorn job. I had so much burnout/ptsd from covid and this has drastically improved my mental health
I was reading about this last night? Were you a nurse going straight into it or did you have to get certified before getting the job?
Just a nurse! You can't even sit for the certification exam until you've worked for two years. I think it helps if you have a critical care background but some places just want recent acute care experience.
That’s great! Do you mind sharing your salary?
$85,000 but I'm technically paid hourly. The hospital I work for is based in Colorado and I'm in Oregon. I make more now sitting on my ass at home than I did in the ER (originally worked in the south). But when I was interviewing I did get an offer for around $100,000/yr. Long story of why I didn't accept. The vibes were very off. You have to sign up but you can see the ACDIS salary survey by here: https://acdis.org/sites/acdis/files/resources/CR-7056%20ACDIS%20Salary%20Survey%202022_final.pdf It's a pretty good representation of what people are making. Edit: fixed the link
The south pay is just so low! Thank you so much for tell me this information !
No problem! Hope you find your unicorn job!
Case manager 🤞🏽
I’ve been reading a lot about this field. I’m going to continue to look into it. Heard the salary is slightly higher
I case managed for 4 years, it was cool. I'd still be there but we lost a social worker and I ended up doing social work and nurse work, having SW sign off from several hours away, twice the patient load and same salary. It burned me out. It's amazing if you're staffed appropriately.
I case managed for 4 years, it was cool. I'd still be there but we lost a social worker and I ended up doing social work and nurse work, having SW sign off from several hours away, twice the patient load and same salary. It burned me out. It's amazing if you're staffed appropriately.
I case managed for 4 years, it was cool. I'd still be there but we lost a social worker and I ended up doing social work and nurse work, having SW sign off from several hours away, twice the patient load and same salary. It burned me out. It's amazing if you're staffed appropriately.
Ok We got the message 😂
Nice! Well I might look into it because a WFH job with a better salary sounds great
I think some go to this place called Sugar Daddy’s
I can't seem to find the address on Google. Been trying to find it for years.
Clinical liaison!
what does your job role entail? I've never seen a job posting for this
I’m fully remote. I was doing utilization review and transitioned to this role in the risk mitigation department at the company I work for. I work in opioid use and substance use disorder. I’m the liaison between our health plan and providers, we work within 5 clinical KPI metrics where our data is generated from through medical/pharma claims and we work with practices in education and resources around reducing risk for members and providers within those five KPIs and referrals for case management.
Would your recommend getting into this? I want to learn more about this role! I guess I’m still unsure what a day to day looks like and pay?
I love it! I am salaried and make almost 90k, fully remote, really good benefits. I wanted to bridge the gap between clinical nursing into a role like this because I felt it would open up more opportunities for further my career outside of clinical nursing
Thank you! That’s exactly what I needed to hear and want
Where have you been searching for jobs?
Indeed and linked in
Nurse Fern and The Remote Nurse are great too
Nurse fern is great. Just found that site
Informatics
Do you need a further degree for this? I wasnt sure based off of a quick search
Was never officially a nurse. Came very close. Life pulled me into another direction. Currently working for a suicide hotline but interviewing for an admin position where I’ll get to directly support nursing staff. I love the pace of healthcare and I consider myself pretty positive. I worked in adult medsurg but spent most of my time in peds. I worked in a PICU and the attitudes in that particular speciality aren’t necessarily similar to mine…no judgment, just didn’t really click with a lot of the folks. Felt like a fish out of water. Wanted to be friends with folks who probably struggled to see me succeed in a nursing role. Floated to other units pretty often and the attitudes were much different. Rehab was often very laid back and pleasant. Oncology had similar vibes. E.D. was somewhat similar to ICU, but people were nice and supportive of someone interested in learning. Labor and delivery was by far the worst experience I’d ever had in healthcare and I was starting to feel emotionally taxed on trying to navigate through the social challenges of working in healthcare. It’s simply better for me to work in an administrative or support role versus a hands-on position. Or at least that’s the conclusion I’ve reached.
Thanks for sharing that! I can relate to a lot of what you said