1,067 evolution "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" positions at University of Washington
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of staff vacations, schedules and coverage. Assists with staff timesheets and distribution of accruals. Plans, schedules and/or carries out orientation program and staff training/development for established
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development through educational programs, current literature, in-service meetings and workshops. Working Conditions: Job Location/Working Conditions Normal office environment Exposure to blood-borne pathogens
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Scheduled Hours 37.5 Position Summary Job Description Summary The Development Officer reports to the Executive Director of Operations and is responsible for fundraising as a generalist on behalf of
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to ensure development supports Incident, Change, Problem, Request, and Knowledge processes Support CMDB data integrity where apps integrate with CIs Track KPIs for release quality and cycle time Share
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. Provides data to the direction for budget development and in devising systems that support efficiency of care. Maintains records pertinent to personnel and the operation of the department. Hires, manages and
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& Clinics units. Participate and support the development and maintenance of public records education and training materials for UW Medicine personnel. Provide public records training for UW Medicine personnel
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, upgrades and testing. Analyze functionality to recommend configurations and enhancements. Determine, verify and test configurations and enhancements in 3 environments: Development, Test, and Production
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, development, and deployment of a suite of GIS-based tools that support transportation agencies and municipalities in producing interoperable data aligned with the Transportation Data Exchange Infrastructure
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administration, health information, or related field Minimum four years of experience working with healthcare quality data Demonstrated proficiency in a variety of tools for the design and development of reporting
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. The Bjornstad and Pyle laboratories focus on metabolic and hemodynamic mechanisms underlying the development of diabetic kidney disease (DKD) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in Type 1 (T1D) and Type 2 (T2D