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What Does A Medical Transcriptionist Do
Medical transcription is like nothing
else you'll ever experience. Doctors see patients in hospitals, clinics and physicians'
offices and dictate important information about the patient's history, physical
examination, diseases, procedures, laboratory tests and diagnoses. They talk in technical
terms and often so quickly that you must know approximately what they are supposed to say
or you won't be able to understand it when you hear it!
New students often think that the
"dictation" doctors do is like some executive dictating a letter to a secretary,
in which he/she specifies every line break, every paragraph, every punctuation mark, and
most of the spelling. This is absolutely NOT how doctors dictate. They expect the medical
transcriptionists to do the formatting, the spelling, and to convert that dictated
material from the doctor's shorthand medical slang to formal medical language.
Doctors often say things in their
dictation that they never intend to be transcribed. They say, "Oh, no, start
over," "Go back and change that," and make all sorts of chitchat. They tell
the transcriptionists jokes, relate cute stories, and they sing! They have conversations
with people around them and often do this WHILE doing the actual dictation.
Example of something a medical transcriptionist might hear:
"The patient is a 32-year-old put him in room 2 white male
who presented with a yeah, start an IV chief complaint of rats I can't find it what was
this guy's problem when he got here? Never mind belly pain (rattle of x-ray film) ...okay,
she can go; this is clear."
They also often begin and end by saying hello, goodbye, thank
you, and have a nice holiday. They don't intend for this to be transcribed. The job of the
medical transcriptionist is to figure out what is supposed to be part of the report and
what is not. We are not robots who simply repeat everything we hear. We use judgment in
deciding what to include and what not to include. Even if you are asked to do
"verbatim" transcription, they NEVER expect you to type every sound dictating
person
makes. We don't transcribe noises; we transcribe and interpret meaning. We do that without
changing the style of the physician's dictation and without ever changing the medical
meaning. The end result is that the report says exactly what the doctor wants it to say.
That's what medical transcriptionists do.
We can arrange to speak by phone if you
like. We are at our office all day and evening. We usually check our E-mail messages
throughout the day. If for some reason we are not responded within 24 hours, please assume
we didn't get it and re-send.
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