Thanks for the advice. The idea of clinic work sounds good, but I do feel comfortable with acute ...
Posted By: Burnt out on Bad Companies on 2006-04-10
In Reply to: Well, read on if you want an honest opinion SM - need more info
care. I have a lot of experience with operative notes, DS, consults, radiology etc.. but I am not that thrilled with ESLs. It is just harder to make money on them. I think I will look into clinic work. It was only the lack of work that was bothering me about these companies and mismanaging the accounts they did have, broken promises, and just getting the runaround.. over everything from benefits to work.
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How are the MW accts that use the ExText? Good sound? Lots of work? Acute care or clinic? Thx. nm
s
is this acute or clinic work? nm
Thanks. That sounds like good advice.
is that clinic work or acute care if I may ask?
I prefer acute care and am really not interested in clinic but was told I have to do it
Acute care versus clinic work...sm
Which do you feel you can get a better line count on and would you take a slight pay cut to do just clinic work? Most acute care accounts have such difficult dictators and such I was wondering if it would just be better to go to a good clinic account even if it meant less per line. Opinions?
Clinic work versus acute care?
Anybody have any input as to the money to be made doing clinic work versus acute care?
Acute care and clinic work are two completely different
things. Anyone can switch from acute care to clinic, but if all you've done are a few clinics, then you only have experience in a few specialties & acute care requires experience in ALL specialties. Big difference.
Are there companies out there that have clinic work? Tired of acute care..
I have both hospital and clinic experience, but I am tired of working for large hospitals where you cannot get familiar with the accounts or the dictators. I work part-time for an orthopedic surgeon and I love doing it as I can breeze through it because I have learned his style, voice etc.. It is getting so frustrating every day doing different doctors who either cannot speak English or choose to speed talk and ramble on so fast. Do they think we are miracle workers?? I guess you could say I want an easy account, which by now, I have figured out, does not exist OR does it?? HELP.. any ideas besides getting out of this profession
Acute and/or clinic work? Set schedule or flexible hours? Thank you! nm
I feel if it sounds too good to be true,
there usually is a catch..susan
Clinic or acute care? I am looking to work 5-6 hours a day during the morning and early SM
afternoon hours. Which type of work is more appropriate for this kind of schedule, clinic or acute care? I really do have some time constraints outside of these hours as well as on weekends, so I need to find something where I can concentrate on working during those daytime hours. I am a newer Transcriptionist (at this point looking for IC), and I am hoping to find a place to stay for a long time. Any advice appreciated. Thanks
not good... 7.5 for clinic work, no negotiating :(
and this is on an account with TONS of dictators, so you rarely get the same dictator. Hard to make your lines.
not good... 7.5 for clinic work, no negotiating :(
and this is on an account with TONS of dictators, so you rarely get the same dictator. Hard to make your lines.
Dean Clinic - Not a good place to work. sm
The department supervisor treats employees like dirt, unless you jump the minute she screams or threatens you. They are making things extremely difficult for the long-time people so they quit, and don't have to pay benefits. Quite a few already have since the first of the year. Anyone thinking about going in there had better turn and run fast, no matter what you may be promised. It's not a good place to work.
Your line rate is good for clinic work.
nm
Good companies hiring for clinic work
Know any good companies hiring for clinic work? I'd rather get lower pay for clinic and have a higher line count than stress out over acute care at this point.
I went from clinic to acute
I worked for about 10 years as an IC for clinc work, then lost my account (like you). I got a job in house at my local hospital and also applied with a national for PT work at home with a teaching hospital. Things were slow going at first, having to look a lot of things up, etc. I left the in house job after a couple years to be at home full time again. Being in house helped a lot because of having the other girls to help and I also learned the ins and outs of HIM dept. Poster below is correct about teaching hospitals being difficult. But if you are going to learn acute, you have to do them. I find the work very interesting. I now work at home as a full time employee for a teaching hospital and couldn't be happier.
See what companies will test you for acute care even though you don't have experience. I passed my test by a national. The test took me a while, looking things up, etc, but it was worth it. Just remember things will be slow for a while. I only did about 150 lines an hour in the beginning (now I am at 300+).
acute/clinic
clinic is not like ER, pays less than acute, you may have a few ESL in any clinic company, and is different from acute in that you have all different specialties who have different word lists, from ENT to dermatology to pediatrics, etc., and once you learn them, make macros or normals, you can make more LPH.
Clinic or acute?
Do any of you happen to work on the clinic side? Just wondering. Thanks.
they have mostly acute but some clinic
x
clinic or acute
The ad says that they are looking for acute cardiology. I am thinking this is a hospital account. I could be wrong. It does not specifically state clinic though.
Good company, lots of clinic work, pay on time.
nm
Are you telling her to work for $5 an hour? That is not healthy or good advice nm
nm
100+ clinic and 50+ acute - really depends on
x
Was that for acute care or clinic? nm
nm
Are they looking for Acute Care or Clinic?
There are a few posts already about Axolotl if you want to do a search. A lot of negative lately. Clinic work is not bad but the pay is average. Acute Care is terrible. 90% ESL on some accounts and every account has conflicting Account Specifics so you really have to pay attention to which account you are on. (for example, if the dictator says 50 cc - you type on one account 50 cc, but on another 50 mL), and QA will nail you on that if you do it wrong. Work comes in by TAT, so you may switch every other job between 2 or 3 accounts all day or get a string of the same horrible ESL dictator in a row. No flexibility. They are a small company with only enough MTs to cover incoming jobs. You tell them what hours you are going to work and you have to be there at that specific time. Really depends on what you are looking for in a new job. Ask lots of questions. Let us know how it goes.
pay depends on if you are acute or clinic...
I was told acute care starts at 8, but clinic is less than 8 cents, but that is normal just about everywhere.
Clinic should pay 8 cpl and acute care 9 cpl
Clinic notes can be just as difficult as acute care. You can run up against difficult dictators and varying templates. Acute care reports can be longer, but not anymore difficult especially if you know the specialty. I say 7 cpl for clinic is way too low. Acute care should pay more in that you will most likely have a variety of dictators and specialties whereas with clinic you tend to get the same dictators and shorter reports, but not always. JMO.
Acute care or clinic? - nm
NM
are your accounts acute or clinic?
nm
Clinic and some acute care
I work on clinic, but I also work in acute care too. The work is not an over abundance, but it's enough to keep me going. I hate to hear you are having such problems. At my last job I had a humdinger of an account and just could not make my lines. It's so frustrating, but hang in there. Maybe things will change soon.
both acute care and clinic
-- not sure about ER. No benefits, not quite an IC, actually SE (statutory) status/no benefits. They have a couple systems in place, my work is done over the I/N; some positions require unlimited LD.
The post, below, about acute vs clinic got me
thinking. I started in clinic 15 years ago and at some point the nat'l I work for put me on a hospital account-- ER. I've been doing multi-speciality and ER reports for hospitals around the country, two different national's ever since (discharge/H and P/consults, etc). Everything but Op's.
I never thought of it that I was learning acute care, but I guess this means I do have acute care experience? I've been doing it for around 7 years now. I don't recall a big transition between the two.
Acute care advice
Are there any companies out there that you do not have to type so many lines in an 8-hour day- say you have to do 1200 lines a day but if you do not do it in 8 hours that, you can work till you achieve this. I know to most of you that probably sounds like nothing but to someone who has no acute care experience it can be difficult at times. I just got hired at a hospital. I worked clinic notes for 4 years, about 3 different specialities. I was hired by this hospital. I was up front and told them I did not have acute care experience and it did not seem to matter. Well now, I am having trouble meeting my 1200 line count a day. I am always short 50-75 a day, especially when given OP reports and oh yes, the foreign Docs that cannot speak clearly. I was working over a half-hour every day and got in trouble for this by the Director. I told them that I was told that I needed to meet the line count everyday, so what do they expect me to do. Now I work through lunch to make up at least ½ hour. I am finding this job to be very stressful and wonder if it will ever come to me. I have done over 45 Docs already, as they do not give you the same ones, which is also time learning. Is there anyone that had no experience with acute care and just hung in there and hoped for the best? I am just wondering if they are going to hang in there as they said that I should have had the line count by now. I have been there about 3 months. Is there hope?
Thanks for listening and advice would be great. I am ready to throw in the towel, as it looks pretty grim, especially if they keep giving the OP reports.
Wmx has acute, clinic, radiology and ER accounts. nm
.
They have acute care, ER and multispecialty clinic,
nm
6.5-clinic to 8-acute, special teams-9
nm
225+ acute care 300+ clinic - I avg'd almost 400/hr this week - sm
It is easier to get more on clinics because your expansions can be much more specific than on acute care. I have over 40,000 entries now, so most things I don't have to type straight. If you have specific questions, feel free to email
acute care versus clinic
You are so right. Same here. Started in acute care about 15 years ago back when they had tapes. arrrgh! I started out weekends in radiology which was for 5 docs and then when I graduated college went to HIM to do acute care. Started with maybe 30 doctors and doing all kinds of reports and hospital grew to 250 doctors minimum before I left there a couple of years ago. Now I am so thankful for the experience because I am very flexible with what I can do and that makes a better candidate on an interview. Best of luck to you and do stick with it if you can. Actually, I think its great if you are only missing it by less than 100 lines a day. Some advice, though, make you your own 'normals' and maybe save them in folders in Word or something if you can. Even if the dictation isn't the same every time, you can read through while the person is dictating and change what needs to be changed. Op notes are notoriously repetitive for surgeons, barring complications, so that is why it is important to proof as they dictate. Hope this helps bump up that production.
Does MDI-MD have clinic accounts or only acute care? nm
nm
Acute care is quite a bit harder than clinic.
Definitely. Never a good idea to lie. You won't find anyone at most big companies to ask beginner questions to, on ops or otherwise.
Acute care is very different than clinic notes
I have been an MT for 20 years. I have hired and trained MTs for a service. There is a HUGE difference between clinic notes and acute care. The poster who says she made the switch and didn't have problems is lucky and is probably a very good MT, who had a good base of knowledge to start with. It can be done, but not in every case.
Some MTs who work on clinic notes work for the same set of dictators every day typing about colds and aches and pains. Dictators tend to say the same things over and over. Most clinic notes are only a 2 or 3 paragraphs. They work for the same set of dictators for years and even have their stuff canned, just pull it in and make the changes.
You put that same MT on an acute care account for a large teaching hospital and they may have a nervous breakdown, I've seen the meltdown, it's not pretty. On an acute care account like that you may have all the specialities and subspecialties, probably 30-40 or maybe more, adults and peds, with all the dictators, anywhere from 5 to ?? And residents, let's not forget them. And all the work types. They are dictating DS, H&Ps, consults, ORs, clinic visits, progress notes, etc. They are dictating about new procedures and medications that may not even be in reference books yet or that are experimental. Some of those reports are 20-30 minutes long, 7 or 8 pages.
I'm not knocking the clinic MTs, but don't just assume because one does clinic notes, they can jump into acute care. That would be very misleading and a total injustice to a newbie who read that and got into an acute care position, possibly setting themselves up for failure.
Also acute care here and maybe the clinic people
should have learned how to branch out to acute rather than losing jobs to EMR if that is the case.
Good advice, and advice that I'm giving real thought to ...
If I had known that they offshored before I accepted employment with them I never would have gone there to work. I've been here long enough now though to not want to lose my benefits.
Still ... making a DECENT PAYCHECK and making a living without being stressed out over the type of work that I'm doing is just as important as good benefits.
Can you give us the name of the company and if it's clinic or acute care? Thx. nm
s
Multi clinic versus acute care
I was wondering if it is possible to make a good line count with a multi-speciality clinic. I was offered a PT position; one with acute care and one with a multi-clinic. Just wondering what you all thought.
They're in here on a search. 7/8 cpl for clinic/acute. Maybe use ExText
s
specify, clinic/acute, IC/employee, national/own accounts,
nm
I beg to differ. Acute Care versus Clinic
You may have the same terminology in clinic as with Acute care, but I promise you, you will have terminology in Acute Care that you will never see in clinic. The terminology in Acute care is more extensive than in clinic. I have done the both, but I specialize in Acute Care with Ops. I've been in the business 30 years. Multispeciality clinic is quicker and easier terminology, therefore the pay is less.
Both their acute care and clinic starting offers are more than that.
nm
Any companies hiring out there for Psych/Behavioral Med Clinic/Acute?
I'm looking specifically for a primary account in this specialty. Any ideas? Clinic or acute would be okay, and I'd prefer PT, but would consider FT if the hours were right... just thought I'd check in here and see if anyone has any ideas. Thanks!
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