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Welcome
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Employment Prospective for
Medical Transcription Jobs
Medical Tanscription Jobs - opportunities will be good.
Employers prefer medical transcriptionists who
have completed a postsecondary training program
at a vocational school or community college.
Many medical transcriptionists telecommute from
home-based offices as employees or subcontractors
for hospitals and transcription services or
as self-employed, independent contractors.
About 4 out of 10 worked in hospitals and another
3 out of 10 worked in offices of physicians.
Nature of the Work
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Medical transcriptionists in medical transcription jobs, listen to dictated
recordings made by physicians and other healthcare
professionals and transcribe them into medical reports,
correspondence, and other administrative material.
They generally listen to recordings on a headset,
using a foot pedal to pause the recording when necessary,
and key the text into a personal computer or word
processor, editing as necessary for grammar and clarity. The documents
they produce include discharge summaries, history
and physical examination reports, operative reports, consultation
reports, autopsy reports, diagnostic imaging studies,
progress notes, and referral letters. Medical transcriptionists
return transcribed documents to the physicians or
other healthcare professionals who dictated them for review
and signature, or correction. These documents eventually
become part of patients’ permanent files.
To understand and accurately transcribe
dictated reports into a format that is clear and comprehensible
for the reader, medical transcriptionists must understand
medical terminology, anatomy and physiology, diagnostic
procedures, pharmacology, and treatment assessments.
They also must be able to translate medical jargon and
abbreviations into their expanded forms. To help identify
terms appropriately, transcriptionists refer to standard
medical reference materials—both printed and electronic;
some of these are available over the Internet. Medical
transcriptionists must comply with specific standards
that apply to the style of medical records, in addition
to the legal and ethical requirements involved with
keeping patient information confidential.
Experienced transcriptionists in medical transcription jobs spot mistakes
or inconsistencies in a medical report and check to
correct the information. Their ability to understand
and correctly transcribe patient assessments and treatments
reduces the chance of patients receiving ineffective
or even harmful treatments and ensures high quality
patient care.
Currently, most healthcare providers transmit
dictation to medical transcriptionists using either
digital or analog dictating equipment. The Internet
has grown to be a popular mode for transmitting documentation.
Many transcriptionists in medical transcription jobs receive dictation over the Internet
and are able to quickly return transcribed documents
to clients for approval. Another emerging trend is the
implementation of speech recognition technology, which
electronically translates sound into text and creates
drafts of reports. Reports are then formatted; edited
for mistakes in translation, punctuation, or grammar;
and checked for consistency and possible medical errors.
Transcriptionists working in areas with standardized
terminology, such as radiology or pathology, are more
likely to encounter speech recognition technology. However,
use of speech recognition technology will become more
widespread as the technology becomes more sophisticated.
Medical transcriptionists who work in
physicians’ offices and clinics may have other
office duties, such as receiving patients, scheduling
appointments, answering the telephone, and handling
incoming and outgoing mail. Medical secretaries, discussed
in the statement on secretaries and administrative assistants
elsewhere in the Handbook, may also transcribe as part
of their jobs. Court reporters, also discussed elsewhere
in the Handbook, have similar duties, but with a different
focus. They take verbatim reports of speeches, conversations,
legal proceedings, meetings, and other events when written
accounts of spoken words are necessary for correspondence,
records, or legal proof.
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