
Medical
Transcription
Career Studies Certificate

What do Medical Transcriptionists
do?
According
to the U.S. Department of Labor, Medical
transcriptionists listen to dictated recordings made by physicians and
other health care 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 health care professionals
who dictated them for review and signature, or correction. These documents
eventually become part of patients’ permanent files.
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How money
does a medical transcriptionist make?
According
to the U.S.
Department of Labor Medical transcriptionists had median
hourly earnings of $13.64 in May 2004. The middle 50 percent earned
between $11.50 and $16.32. The lowest 10 percent earned less than
$9.67, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $19.11. Median
hourly earnings in the industries employing the largest numbers of
medical transcriptionists in May 2004 were:
|
General medical
and surgical hospitals |
$13.83 |
|
Offices
of physicians |
$13.40 |
|
Business
support services |
$13.40 |
Compensation methods for medical transcriptionists
vary. Some are paid based on the number of hours they work or on the
number of lines they transcribe. Others receive a base pay per hour
with incentives for extra production. Employees of transcription services
and independent contractors almost always receive production-based
pay. Independent contractors earn more than do transcriptionists who
work for others, but independent contractors have higher expenses than
their corporate counterparts, receive no benefits, and may face higher
risk of termination than do employed transcriptionists
What is the job
outlook for medical transcriptionists?
Job opportunities will be good. Employment of medical transcriptionists
is projected to grow
faster than average for all occupations through 2014. Demand
for medical transcription services will be spurred by a growing and
aging population. Older age groups receive proportionately greater
numbers of medical tests, treatments, and procedures that require
documentation. A high level of demand for transcription services
also will be sustained by the continued need for electronic documentation
that can easily be shared among providers, third-party payers, regulators,
consumers, and health information systems. Growing numbers of medical
transcriptionists will be needed to amend patients’ records,
edit documents from speech recognition systems, and identify discrepancies
in medical reports.
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What
do Medical Tracrisptioists do?
According to
the U.S.
Department of Labor , 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.
Medical transcriptionists who work in physicians’ offices
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,
also may 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.
What
is the job outlook for medical transcriptionists?
According
to the U.S.
Department of Labor Contracting out transcription work
overseas and advancements in speech recognition technology are not
expected to significantly reduce the need for well-trained medical
transcriptionists. Outsourcing transcription work abroad—to
countries such as India, Pakistan, Philippines, and the Caribbean—has
grown more popular as transmitting confidential health information
over the Internet has become more secure; however, the demand for
overseas transcription services is expected only to supplement the
demand for well-trained domestic medical transcriptionists. In addition,
reports transcribed by overseas medical transcription services usually
require editing for accuracy by domestic medical transcriptionists
before they meet domestic quality standards. Speech-recognition technology
allows physicians and other health professionals to dictate medical
reports to a computer that immediately creates an electronic document.
In spite of the advances in this technology, the software has been
slow to grasp and analyze the human voice and the English language,
and the medical vernacular with all its diversity. As a result, there
will continue to be a need for skilled medical transcriptionists to
identify and appropriately edit the inevitable errors created by speech
recognition systems, and to create a final document.
Hospitals will continue to employ a large percentage of medical transcriptionists,
but job growth there will not be as fast as in other industries. An
increasing demand for standardized records should result in rapid employment
growth in physicians’ offices, especially in large group practices. |