I'm working at Doximity with Rails and Go. Great team, interesting technical problems, and we actually make a difference in the medical care of others.
Some physician testimonies:
I was searching for clinical trials for one of my patients with severe eczema refractory to many therapies. In my search, I was referred to a nearby expert. Instead of calling the department, or trying to search through the many webpages of the hospital, I found the physician on Doximity and simply sent her a message via Doximity on my iPhone and got my patient set up with the clinical trial manager within a matter of hours.
I had a young gentleman with a vague brain surgery history who was brought in to my community ER by ambulance. He had altered mental status so he was unable to give me any information on his condition or history. Luckily EMS said he had surgery at a neighboring academic center. I contacted medical records at the other hospital but they said there was no record of the patient. Using Doximity I snapped a photo of the patient's wristband and face sheet. Turns out his DOB was wrong. Medical records faxed back his records just in time for me to arrange transfer before the patient lost his airway.
In addition to Jey, feel free to contact me on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/benmanns) or email at bmanns@doximity.com if you want a perspective from a remote engineer.
Some physician testimonies:
I was searching for clinical trials for one of my patients with severe eczema refractory to many therapies. In my search, I was referred to a nearby expert. Instead of calling the department, or trying to search through the many webpages of the hospital, I found the physician on Doximity and simply sent her a message via Doximity on my iPhone and got my patient set up with the clinical trial manager within a matter of hours.
I had a young gentleman with a vague brain surgery history who was brought in to my community ER by ambulance. He had altered mental status so he was unable to give me any information on his condition or history. Luckily EMS said he had surgery at a neighboring academic center. I contacted medical records at the other hospital but they said there was no record of the patient. Using Doximity I snapped a photo of the patient's wristband and face sheet. Turns out his DOB was wrong. Medical records faxed back his records just in time for me to arrange transfer before the patient lost his airway.
In addition to Jey, feel free to contact me on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/benmanns) or email at bmanns@doximity.com if you want a perspective from a remote engineer.