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Serving Over 20,000 US Medical Transcriptionists

Maybe it's to embrace diversity in the workplace.

Posted By: hyphenated-American days on 2005-09-28
In Reply to: "Celebratory Days"? - kyradmt

Kwanzaa, Hanukah, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Leif Ericksen Day, Lent?  I'd take all 40 days of Lent with celebratory incentive pay.


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Diversity
Affirmative action?  I thought there was no more affirmative action.  Didnt the Supreme Court strike it down?  I disagree with immigrants not wanting to work.  I live in a part of the USA that has lots of Asians, Mexicans and Indians and from what I can see, they work pretty darn hard.  When I need my lawn taken care of or repairs on my house, who does it.  Hardworking Mexicans and they work very hard and the money I pay them is nothing compared to how hard they have worked.  As far as going to war, when it is a volunteer Army you always get more minorities as they are trying to better themselves in their new country and put themselves through school and they pay dearly for it by dying or being maimed.  I am glad this is a melting pot.  I grew up in NYC and loved the diversity.  Yet I have a friend who grew up in Missouri and she never met an Hispanic or African-American till she moved to CA.  Now that is sad.
True, but that doesn't mean we have to embrace it by working for these companies!
have a spine and absolutely refuse to work for any company that outsources offshore. 
MT Workplace Issues

What a long thread!  I wasn't sure where to post this within this thread, as it goes back and forth in topics from dying field, to let's strike, to managers are Satan, etc. 


My only conclusion from this thread regarding the unhappiness so many have with being an MT is that the majority of you are young. I say that because you have such passion to defend a field you feel is worth fighting for, and that certainly is not a bad thing.  I used to be you.  I am older, though not necessarily wiser, but I have learned what works - the hard way.


All your complaints are very true for this profession, as well as for every job on the planet.  There will always be office politics.  There will always be a gossip.  There will always be somebody who doesn't like you or that you can't get along with.  There will always be a supervisor you think is incompetent. On and on and on. 


At my last on-site job, there was a very tight clique and I did not fit in, probably because I didn't try, nor did I have the desire to do so.  I brought my lunch, ate it outside, in the office, where ever.  Sometimes someone not in transcription would come in and join me, which was great, and sometimes I would eat alone, which was great.  I was invited to go to lunch with my co-worker out of politeness I'm sure, and I did go - once.  After listening to the gossip and the complaining and the attacks on everyone who walked by, I knew that would be the last time I would go to lunch with her.  She thought she knew it all, and I let her think that.  It made her happy and my life easier.  She did her thing, I did mine.  We got along great at work, but we would never be friends, and that's why it was a great place to work. 


In a nutshell: Do your job and do it well.  Do your time, and when the day is over, it is OVER.  You don't worry about what others are saying about you or anyone else.  As for being the meek little typer flying low and never saying a word, don't be quick to judge.  She is the smartest one of the bunch provided she sticks up for herself on the job front if need be.  She doesn't get involved, she minds her own business and does what she was hired to do, and doesn't go home with a headache or an ulcer at the end of her shift.


If you don't like your pay, approach your supervisor with facts and figures backing up your work.  If you are unhappy, start looking elsewhere.  Unless you have legal recourse for some action that management has done, you are wasting your energy.  Actions speak louder than words, let your work speak for itself.  No company wants to see an A+ trancriptionist head for the door, but by all means do so if the job is not right.  Trying to change the mindset of your supervisor will come back to bite you in the butt because you are not the one with the power, she/he is, and you will be looked upon as a threat.  Live by your job description, the one you agreed to when hired.  If your working for the social aspects, lots of luck. 


This is a dying profession.  I will be 50 shortly and I am looking to change my profession because I don't want to be looking for a job at 58 because low pay, outsourcing and VR made it impossible to make a living.  I do not see this being a viable way to support myself in the long run. 


Wow, do I sound OLD!  


 


Music avoids violence in the workplace
Once the office I was working in was so noisy that I had to listen to music in one year and listen to the docs with my other so I didn't get up and konk somebody in the head.