Allied Medical School

Medical Transcription

Medical Transcription Info & News

Prepare for your new medical transcription career with the flexibility and convenience of distance education. As a medical transcriptionist, you will transcribe the dictated words of doctors to create error-free reports. Allied's Medical Transcription Course teaches you how to use common medical abbreviations, symbols, punctuation and grammar, while helping you to increase the speed and accuracy of your typing.

With the prevalence of speech recognition software in the health care industry, many are left to wonder if this will affect today's medical transcriptionists. The answer to this question is a resounding "no." Even as speech recognition software becomes more commonplace, there is still no substitution for human knowledge.

Speech recognition software provides a fast way to get words down on paper, but it is not foolproof. A trained medical transcriptionist is needed to edit the copy for mistakes - from content to grammar. Can software distinguish between these words: "dilate" from "die late," "cauterize" from "caught her eyes," and "nitrate" from "night rate." (Source: MT Daily)

Medical transcriptionists are required for their vast amount of knowledge, including editing skills and medical knowledge. They need to edit mistakes resulting from incorrect translation, punctuation or grammar; and check for consistency and any wording that doesn't make medical sense. It is imperative that medical reports be error free - which can only be assured with the involvement of a medical transcriptionist.

As advanced as innovative voice recognition software has become, there will always be a demand for flesh-and-blood transcribers to apply the human touch needed to discern language nuances and to "train" the technology to identify certain areas of confusion and to correct possible misinterpretations. In addition, trained transcriptionists have the expertise necessary to interpret the tricky nuances of medical terminology - something speech recognition software is unable to do.

In fact, experienced transcriptionists 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 reduce the chance of patients receiving ineffective or even harmful treatments and ensures high-quality patient care.

Bottom line: there's no substitution for the knowledge of trained medical transcriptionists.

1 Comments:

At December 21, 2009 6:46 AM, Blogger Dudley said...

Very true! there are many who are scared of MT on the first day of training. it seems like a big and daunting task! but as you become a little comfortable with it, everything becomes just fine
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