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Tamara S. Melton
Tamara S. Melton
01:12

Tamara S. Melton

Morrison Healthcare

Atlanta, GA USA

"Give yourself credit for what you already know...you have value."

Career Roadmap

Tamara S.'s work combines: Medicine, Food, and Helping People

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Day In The Life

Director of Health Informatics

I serve as an internal consultant on initiatives that utilize technology or data analytics.

My Day to Day

Lots of phone calls! I work at home or in our corporate offices, seeing a technology solution we've worked on for months actually help these folks do their jobs better or makes a task easier for them, or improves our care for our patients. I also get to visit our accounts and work with them on projects. It could be visiting a hospital kitchen where we run the food service operations. We'll shadow the employees as they test out a new technology, such as a new app we've developed.

Skills & Education

Advice for getting started

After passing out at the sight of blood during my nutrition support rotation, I paniced thinking this field was not for me. I realized that my degree and the skills I had in data analytics could take me out of the hospital scene , so I followed that path.

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Nutrition Sciences

    University of North Florida

  • Graduate Degree

    Nutrition Sciences

    Georgia State University

  • Doctorate

    Medical Informatics

    Duke University

  • Certification

    Dietetics/Dietitian

  • Certification

    Management Information Systems, General

Life & Career Milestones

My path in life took a while to figure out

  • 1.

    Growing up, she loved to cook and always thought she would be a chef—she applied and was accepted to culinary school, but she had an epiphany that it wasn’t really what she wanted.

  • 2.

    Inspired by her family members’ struggles with diabetes, she switched her major to nutrition and dietetics.

  • 3.

    Ended up passing out at the sight of blood during her nutrition support rotation, which made her realize that working in the hospital scene was not for her.

  • 4.

    After getting her graduate degree in nutrition, she taught part time at Georgia State University and worked in weight management for nonprofits.

  • 5.

    At age 28, she got an opportunity to play a critical role in developing the new health informatics program at Georgia State University, where she served as program director for four years.

  • 6.

    In order to broaden her knowledge of the field of health informatics, she did a certificate program at Duke University where she was the only non-nurse in the program.

  • 7.

    She ran into an old college friend at a conference who helped her get her current position at Morrison Healthcare—says, ”They were looking for a dietician who knew about data. That’s me!”

  • 8.

    Says she has always had an entrepreneurial heart—she consults and educates about nutrition, develops wellness programs, and hosts workshops.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Myself:

    I can't work in health if I can't stand the sight of blood.

  • How I responded:

    After passing out at the sight of blood during my nutrition support rotation, I paniced thinking this field was not for me. I realized that my degree and the skills I had in data analytics could take me out of the hospital scene , so I followed that path.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • I knew my parents couldn't afford to send me to college. In high school, I heard of a scholarship called Bright Futures. If I got a high enough GPA, I could have 100% of my tuition covered.

  • I was the first person in my immediate family to go to a 4 year college, and then later to graduate school. This meant I had to find people who could provide some tips and encouragement on how to navigate all of the obstacles that would arise.

  • I am an African-American woman in corporate America which tends to mean that I don't often see people who look like me at work.