Ron in NYC
Registered User.
- Local time
- Yesterday, 23:19
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2016
- Messages
- 30
I was first introduced to databases in 1987 with Paradox - a nice DOS based and powerful relational database. I started using ACCESS a few years later. I was working as an economic analyst and used it to analyze the housing market, labor forces, and other data. I later used it in my work in healthcare to analyze "SPARCS" data. SPARCS is a NYS database of ALL hospital admissions and includes facility, age, admittance and 10, or so, post admission diagnoses. It was hundreds of thousands of records.
I'm the only professional, I know of, in my area that uses ACCESS for financial analysis and reporting, allocating costs by many cost centers, and a host of other purposes. I see many many people using Excel for things that would be much better in a database application.
ACCESS sometimes leave me :banghead:, but I think that's mostly the fault of inadequate documentation. Still, I do tasks much faster. For example, I join payroll data downloaded from our provider, and timesheet data, to allocate costs across jobs, and prepare the journal entry right out of ACCESS. I had a staffer who did this, but I now do it myself. What took him the better part of a day, I do in less than a half hour. If everything is good, ten minutes.
I'm the only professional, I know of, in my area that uses ACCESS for financial analysis and reporting, allocating costs by many cost centers, and a host of other purposes. I see many many people using Excel for things that would be much better in a database application.
ACCESS sometimes leave me :banghead:, but I think that's mostly the fault of inadequate documentation. Still, I do tasks much faster. For example, I join payroll data downloaded from our provider, and timesheet data, to allocate costs across jobs, and prepare the journal entry right out of ACCESS. I had a staffer who did this, but I now do it myself. What took him the better part of a day, I do in less than a half hour. If everything is good, ten minutes.