Hello /r/healthcare,
I'm about to start a research assistant position next Monday at an insurance company and they want me to do work on things about state regulation. I'm a pretty capable social scientist with background in psychology and communication and I'm a bit stumped as to what kind of work I should expect while I work there. I take my research work rather seriously so I prefer to walk into that office next Monday with my eyes open on what they expect me to perform with at least *some* background knowledge I can gain beforehand.
A brief description of the company is that it is seeking to expand into new markets and need to know about the state by state legal hurdles that need to be managed before they step into that particular market. (I think)
I've searched on google for some similar work positions and these are what I came up with that sounds similar to what they've described.
1)
2)
Do any of your have a more in depth understanding of the position that could help describe the day to day workings of being a research assistant for a health insurance company to study state regulations? Is it just literature review? How is research performed with a topic that sounds almost legal in nature.
PS I hope I'm not violating any subreddit rules by providing those links, because it can be interpreted as "advertising" here, but I really just want to ask anyone that's familiar with this work type on how it's actually performed onsite. Thank you in advance!
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