Citrix Receiver For Ipad Pro



「Citrix Receiver」は、Citrixが提供しているアプリケーションの仮想化サーバ「Citrix XenApp」のクライアントアプリです。iPhoneやiPod touchから、サーバ. For all its capabilities, the most surprising thing about iPad Pro may be how easily it seems to disappear in the hand. With four new high‑fidelity speakers built directly into its unibody, iPad Pro creates an audio experience as big as its display. The new design produces an engaging soundstage with three times the acoustic output of iPad Air.

  1. Citrix Receiver For Ipad Setup
  2. Citrix Receiver For Ios

Yes, I know what you’re thinking. You’ve been able to “use” Epic on your iPad for years now using the Citrix app. But you clearly have not been able to use Epic in a functional way. You could pull up patient charts, review labs and phone calls, but the process was cumbersome, complicated, and painful. You probably ride to use Epic’s own native apps, but those aren’t the most functional for charting. If you made any attempt to actually document using the Citrix app — good luck, that was near impossible.

My at home set up is a Mac desktop and an iPad. I don’t like carrying around a laptop. For years I dreamed of the ability to pull out my iPad to finish a patient chart or see how a patient was doing in a quick way. If I was at home, I’d have to go to my desktop. Not a big deal, but not the ideal workflow. I gave up on being able to do this on my iPad years ago. That all changed when Apple recently updated iPad OS and gave it trackpad support. Trackpad and mouse support is critical because clicking on screens in Epic via touch is nearly impossible. There are some additional caveats and tips you’ll need if you want to use your iPad to chart in Epic.

The most important caveat to all of this. You can only use this set up if your hospital IT team has given you the ability to remote access your electronic health record using Citrix, something most providers have access to.

What you need:

iPad: Any iPad that supports iPad OS 13.4 or later

Bluetooth mouse and keyboard: You can use a generic bluetooth mouse or trackpad, and bluetooth keyboard. I use Apple’s Magic Keyboard since it allows me to easily remove my iPad easily because of the magnets built in. It also has a great trackpad built right into the keyboard.

Citrix app: Citrix has several iPad apps, you need to make sure you get the right one. You need to use Citrix Workspace, the app with the blue icon. iPad app link

Steps and Tips on how to use this setup:

If your hospital makes you use two factor authentication, do not use safari. I have found that downloading the Citrix file using safari doesn’t work well at this time. Instead, when I use Chrome on my iPad I haven’t had any issues downloading the unique Citrix file through two factor authentication. Important note here, when the file gets downloaded on your iPad, you will need to click the “open in” button. If you don’t see Citrix Receiver showing up automatically, scroll the icons to the right until you see the “more” icon. When you click this, you should be able to add “Workspace”. The below pictures are examples:

If you don’t have two factor authentication, use the same credentials that you hospital IT team has given you for a remote setup on your computer at home. Put this information directly into Citrix Workspace and Epic should launch.

Once Epic launches something that helps is to change your screen size based on your preference and iPad size. The way to do that is to click the overlying top arrow within the Citrix app. When you do this, a pull down menu appears, and you click on “display”. Epic is now optimized for a 17 inch screen. If you want the same 17 inch experience you get at work or at home, you’ll need to go with auto-fit medium (1770 x 1230). Personally, that is too small for me. I opt for the 15 inch experience at 1400 x 900 (custom resolution option). The below pictures show how this looks.

Once you have optimized the screen size to your liking, login to Epic and you’re ready to go. You will find the trackpad / mouse option to be a game changer. I’m not going to show screenshots of my actual Epic hyperspace environment as Epic does not allow people to do that unsanctioned. Free wavepad download for mac.

The below are some tips as well as limitations I’ve found in my experience with this setup.

* Instead of using the trackpad to scroll down, use the arrow keys, much faster
* Keyboard shortcuts like Control Z or Control B don’t work. You need to use the note editor options that Epic has built in
* You don’t have the ability to use the microphone of your iPad, which is puzzling to me. You can use your home microphone on your desktop or laptop Citrix Workspace but can’t on the iPad. This was the biggest limitation to me because I use Dragon dictation heavily when documenting, and I’m hoping in a future upgrade this is enabled.

Conclusion

It’s nice to be able to quickly spin up Epic at home with my iPad. For me I’m still missing the microphone support so I can use dragon dictation. However, for checking up on patients and completing a few charts I have found this setup to be useful. Don’t hesitate to reach out on twitter if you have any questions on this setup.

downloadWhy can't I download this file?Citrix Receiver For Ipad SetupCitrix workspace for ipad pro

Citrix Receiver For Ios

Instructions

To resolve this issue, follow the steps below --
1.) Launch Studio and navigate to Policies node
2.) Click 'Create Policy' to bring up the Policy dialog box
3.) Search for 'Automatic keyboard display'
4.) Click 'Select' and then click 'Allowed' to enable this policy
5.) Click OK to continue and complete the creation of policy

Additional Resources

To learn more about Mobile experience policy settings, visit the following article -- Mobile experience policy settings