I am a senior in premed now.
Posted By: Busy MT'ing on 2006-05-05
In Reply to: Has anyone ever considered going to med school after years of MT or - nursing, etc? Please give me your thoughts on this
!!!
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Just curious, is your dog a senior? I had a senior dog who had similar behavior. sm
She was a Siberian Husky who was 10-11 yrs old when I adopted her, and I got to have her for 5 yrs before she passed on. She was such a character! I still miss her, and we still talk about her antics.
Anyway, she always seemed to have a hard time at night. She would wake up, pace and pant, and sometimes howl as if calling out "Hey, where is everybody, and where am I!" I'd get up and go comfort her. It was like she was disoriented until she saw me, then she'd be okay and go back to sleep. I used to leave a night light on for her too, thinking it might help. (Her vision was not so good.) Come to find out, my vet said her behavior was probable canine dementia/senility.
I'm dealing with a similar situation now with one of my other Siberians, who is now 15 yrs old. Vet has me trying a supplement called Proneurozone (not very expensive). If that doesn't help there's a med. called Selegiline (sp?) we can try.
I just thought you might be interested, if your dog is an older one. ;o)
Oh no, senior moment sm
Am I describing the right state? Could I mean Utah? So confused. Anyway, I've been to both states and they are both beautiful.
I have an almost 18-yo high school senior..
Here's the deal... You can stay here for free IF you are going to college at least part-time and working, or going to college full-time. Unfortunately we don't have the money to pay for her to go to school full-time, but we can help. If she doesn't go to school and only works, then she pays a reasonable rent to live here (our way of encouraging college).
Her plan: She's going to work full-time 3:30 to midnight at the same place her boyfriend works (nice for safety walking out to the car), and she'll take 2 or 3 general ed classes at the junior college. She plans and wants to pay for them herself.
The rule around here is that they can stay as long as they want or need, but be ready when you leave. Trying to discourage willy nilly moving out and moving back in. We're not a hotel and there isn't a revolving door her. And YES, 18-year-olds are notorious for being full of themeslves. But as I tell my kids, I don't care if you're 25, if I'm paying for your shelter, food, utilities, car, gas, clothes or ANYTHING, then you're still a dependent and will live by my rules. An adult provides for himself and until you're out on your own and providing for yourself, you're not really an adult yet.
When I started MT (30+ yrs ago) our "QA" were our senior (sm)
MTs in the same office, as we worked in-house. Nowadays almost all MT jobs, even entry-level, are at home. If a novice MT has exhausted all of their reference resources and still draws a blank on something, how else are they to learn without corrections and feedback from the QA people. Even at this late stage in my career, I am STILL learning a lot from my editors, and am relieved to have a "second set of eyes" look over work that I'm pretty sure is correct, but not 100%. Medical records are permanent legal documents, and MTs sometimes need extra input on their work. Granted, 20+ blanks indicates a problem, but that MT may not be lazy. She may have been working on a specialty new to her or not yet owned a text for that specialty (there are still 1 or 2 I don't have, either... they're EXPENSIVE!) You can't just walk into MT and be an expert overnight, no matter how much you went to school or how many written tests you passed. It's something that also takes practice. I still sometimes will get a doctor that for the life of me I just CAN'T UNDERSTAND, no matter how much I crank the volume or slow it down, yet other MTs who are used to that doctor consider them easy. I would be willing to bet that if that MT were to continue to transcribe for that problem doctor, in addition to having feedback from QA, AND some decent SAMPLES of that doctor's dictation (one of the best teaching tools there is), she will eventually breeze through it. So QA-ers, give the MTs a break.... our job is much harder to learn off-site than on-site.
I saw him IN the ྂs lol. It was the first concert I went to, and I was a senior in HS. Great
and he put on a great show.
This was the only rock concert I ever went to, though I have been to a few other artists's shows. I also smelled marijuana burning for the first time there, and some jerk behind me threw up on my shoulder!
John A., Sr. - I would write out Senior, personally.
nm
found a senior citizen on limited income,
word of mouth from someone else who uses her. She charges $10.00 an hour and does EVERYthing - including windows, oven, frig, at least once a month, bathrooms, floors, laundry, changes linens, and all surface areas weekly - all in less than 4 hours for 1600 sq foot condo. You might try posting a note on a senior citizen bulletin board in your area or go to a limited income residental facility and post a note there.
After 25+ years in this profession and youngest is a high school senior..sm
There is no way, in my experience, I could meet my quota as a full-time MT with my young children at home under my full supervision. I had to hire a sitter to come to the home or send them to a home daycare during their infant and toddler years. I have always had strict turnaround times and have done every specialty out there. Many of these specialties involved an intense fund of knowledge be acquired during the learning curve, not to mention meeting my line counts. I have been working from home for a very long time, and speaking from my own experience, unless you want to be a part time MT, you cannot achieve the disciplined focus to do the job right if you are trying to care for your children at the same time. If you have a spouse who works opposite shift, wonderful. My spouse always worked the same shift as I did, so for my success I had to pay for child care. My best situation was having a sitter at my house where I knew my children were safe, but at the same time I could lock my office door with strict instructions that I not be interrupted. It was nice to take a break or have lunch with them. My youngest is now a senior in high school, one is a sophomore in college, and the other is a college graduate.
I asked a senior citizen the secret to happy marriage = "Chose your fights wisely."
dd
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