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either way is correct. They are moving away from the hyphen but it is not incorrect.

Posted By: QA on 2005-12-08
In Reply to: Antiinflammatory/anti-inflammatories??? - sm

nm


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Looks like it has been correct, it was incorrect.
*nm*
I always correct them. Guess I'm too a@al to put in the incorrect word. nm
x
Regarding changing incorrect patient name to correct name
When I change the pt's name on the DEMO page (AFTER I have already gone onto the typing page), when I do CTRL J inside the document to change to the correct patient name, it will change the patient name on the DEMO Page, but not change the patient name on the document screen that I am typing on. The only way I know to fix this problem is to exit ExText and go back in. Help, please, anyone.
moving auto correct

Does anyone know how to move the auto correct entries that you have on one computer and putting them on another computer also.  I have my home computer that I have my side Doc that I do and I will be working for a hospital and want to also have them on this computer.  I tried some directions that I got off microsoft.com with just putting a floppy in clicking files/folders, local hard drive and put in file name to search- normal. dot but nothing came up.  Is there another way, as I would hate to type these all over again?


Thanks


 


 


did he say hyphen??
is not, i would just put another comman after watery.
with the hyphen
nm
I think hyphen too. I win bet. Thanks!

no hyphen
x
NO hyphen
We took a 2-day vacation. We took 2 days' vacation. We took 2 days of vacation.


'scuse...hyphen. nm
,
We don't use the hyphen where I work

/


hyphen words
My Stedman's Orthopaedic and Rehab Words book shows lunotriquetral (one word no hyphen) and scapholunate (one word no hyphen)Spelling on both is a little different than yours.
Hyphen usage in the following
arthroscopic report:  crabmeat-appearing cartilage Yes?  shovel-like basket forceps ?
Serious question for a hyphen pro
ASR often comes through with a suture stated as 0-Vicryl. I don't think this is correct, as I would not type 2-0-Vicryl but just 2-0 Vicryl or 0 Vicryl. Any opinions?

No hyphen in 0 Vicryl. nm
x
hyphen in mid-phalanx
I was just about to make a post about whether or not to put a hyphen in the word mid-phalanx .. saw this post but am still confused as to whether or not to use a hyphen. Please help.
I would type it without a hyphen.....sm
according to the BOS 3, the trend is to minimize the use of hyphens.
even midday does not need a hyphen, and definitely
not midafternoon.
Word is not always a reliable source for correct grammar and punctuation.
Add the nonbreaking hyphen in your entry. sm
Add the nonbreaking space for your other entries.

In MS Word, the shortcuts are: Ctrl+Shift+Hyphen and Ctrl+Shift+Spacebar
no hyphen but Client Profile comes first...SM
Too lengthy to type here - but if you can get to a BOS (Book of Style) it covers hyphens from pages 207-211 in their entirety!! 
Doctors prefer no hyphen.

`


cntrl+shift+hyphen

I agree, but drop the hyphen (nm)
x
agree... but leave the hyphen in!


That is incorrect... no PTO for SE
...opportunity for PTO for part-time employees and increased PTO of up to 18 days per year for full time employees...
I'm sorry, KJ, but that's incorrect. SM
Stedman's medical dictionary defines fluctuance as: A wavelike motion felt on palpating a cavity with nonrigid walls, especially one containing fluid. Synonym is fluctuation.

"Flocculence" is not even listed.

I suggest checking out Dorland's online medical dictionary or onelook.com for research in the future.
That's incorrect. sm
According to the IRS definition, they can't dictate any part of your schedule, except for the deadline by which you must return the work. When you do it is strictly up to you. Some companies do ask the IC about how many hours per day they'll work or even the time of day they normally like to work. That's so they can find another IC who likes to work the opposite schedule. However, they can't require you to work at that time.
incorrect, but
Keep in mind -- with TATs getting shorter, a 'work when you want' schedule is getting less realistic for meeing some client needs.  Plus, when working in some platforms - especially for hospitals -  it is often limited as to how many licenses you can get -- so perhaps they can only have 4 or 5 people in at one time.  Scheduling for them might be necessary to keep the workflow going and guarantee the volume of work everbody wants.  If you agree and commit to a schedule, I'm sure they expect you to stick pretty closely to that so they know what is going on from day to day. 
Incorrect
She can be eligible if she is not working full-time, is looking for full-time and reports her earnings.  She might only be making $100 per week if it is a small office and her benefits are $400 per week and she can earn up to 50% before they take anything away from her benefits.  You can work part-time and still collect your unemployment.  You just have to be available and looking for full-time employment. 
Unfortunately, you are incorrect.
I have seen MTs who do not know appropriate medical terminology after 20 years of being in this business. Obviously, they should have received some type of correction along the way but either they didn't or they failed/refused to accept a change.

As for the OP stating she has 16 years experience -- still does not change my opinion.

It is a POSSIBILITY that she is not as good as she thinks she is.

I have heard time and time again the story of how many years experience an MT has only to turn around and flat out fail the simplest of dictation tests, even written tests where they can use references. When I show them their errors they are shocked because they had always done it that way.

It is a possibility.

BTW, I see QA personnel daily who can do no better, either.

That is incorrect.........sm
The other post is right. No one doing your taxes should even ask that question as long as they know you are an IC and paying everything yourself. The hours you work have absolutely nothing to do with it. IC means you pay all your taxes, your company pays nothing for you. As long as this is the case, the IRS could care less. They just want to know they are getting their money. And yes, you can count your home office deductions as long as the office is used only for your work and not leisure time or anyone else's work area.
Never. This is incorrect.
I did QA for a number of years, and if I had seen "labwork" or "bloodwork" in a report they would have been marked as errors. These are neither proper English words nor even "usage" medical jargon.
BOS under prefixes says to omit the hyphen in most re- words. But..sm

say to use re-cover (to cover again not recover from surgery) and re-create (not recreate, meaning to play). Or use it if the resulting word will be awkward as in re-x-rayed or re-emphasize or re-introduce. This is on page 330 of BOS II.


But even though it's in print, your QA may still disagree with you. :) nm


Positive the hyphen doesn't go in sm for Vicryl
The zero (0) and one (1) can stand alone. You put a # if the dictate it, not if they don't. 1 Vicryl, or 0 Vicryl is correct, as is 2-0 Vicryl and 3-0 Vicryl and 5-0 Vicryl Rapide (not RePEED) as I had an MT transcribe and who SHOULD have looked this up!

Numbers really can stand alone, as above or in 2 days' time. I had an MT type in 1-day and that is wrong, it is just 1 day or even one day. We are so used to sticking stuff together with hyphens and what not, it seems odd at times, but it is true. I'd rather see a number stuck alone that really needs to be a compound modifier, than see them always as compound modifiers when they are not. This is the most common error I am seeing in QA right now.
drop the hyphen, it is a stand alone, no noun follows.nm
nm
I don't know where you got your figures, but you are incorrect.

Self Employment tax is only about 15.3%, which is only a small percentage more than you'd pay with employee status.  FICA and Medicare are already taken into that figure.  As a self-employed person, you get to deduct a bunch of stuff, too, so your taxable income isn't as high as it would be if you were an employee.  Nobody earning $1,000 is taxed at 40%.  You have to earn more than $278,450 as a single person to be in the higher federal tax bracket of 39.6%.  I've been self-employed for over 8 years now.  I've never paid anywhere near 40% in taxes.


BTW, I have a minor in accounting with many years of bookkeeping and tax preparation experience.  If you still don't believe me, check out the Small Business section at the IRS.GOV website.  There is a ton of accurate information there.


I don't know where you got your figures, but you are incorrect.

Self Employment tax is only about 15.3%, which is only a small percentage more than you'd pay with employee status.  FICA and Medicare are already taken into that figure.  As a self-employed person, you get to deduct a bunch of stuff, too, so your taxable income isn't as high as it would be if you were an employee.  Nobody earning $1,000 is taxed at 40%.  You have to earn more than $278,450 as a single person to be in the higher federal tax bracket of 39.6%.  I've been self-employed for over 8 years now.  I've never paid anywhere near 40% in taxes.


BTW, I have a minor in accounting with many years of bookkeeping and tax preparation experience.  If you still don't believe me, check out the Small Business section at the IRS.GOV website.  There is a ton of accurate information there.


Actually, you're incorrect. sm
Take a look at any newspaper. You'll see positions for SECRETARIES requiring bachelor degrees. Countless jobs consider a 4-year degree a basic requirement for being considered. A bachelor degree shows the ability to follow through, if anything. No, it's not 100% assurance of a great job, but it does open up doors that will absolutely be closed to you otherwise. And statistics consistently show that people with a bachelor degree tend to make quite a bit more than those without. You can't argue successfully when there's concrete evidence to prove otherwise.
No, actually, you're incorrect.

With my experience and with no college degree, I could get a job as a legal secretary anywhere in the United States, and in many of these places, I'd actually earn more money than an associate attorney in the firm.  Have done it several times before changing fields.


That old saying, "Jack of all trades, master of none" keeps popping in my head.


and you are incorrect - all condo and....sm
ALL condo associations and homeowners associations have rules and regulations that ALL must follow and if you cannot or do not want to follow them - you cannot live there.  It's that simple. Many of the rules and regulations are also benefitting the owners, like keeping riff-raff out.  *lol*
Lynn - you are incorrect!!! It's a......sm

for example, my state never required a license if you worked at home on a computer with having no traffic to your home, until THEY CHANGED the law/rule.......


 


your QA dept is incorrect....

from whonamedit dot com and when it's a proper name and you have to put *non* in front of it - you hyphenate..non-Hodgkin's lymphoma
































Thomas Hodgkin (1798-1866)
English physcian and pathologist, born August 17, 1798, in Pentonville, St. James Parish, Middlesex; died April 5, 1866, Jaffa, Palestine [now Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel].
Hodgkin-Paltauf-Sternberg syndrome (Hodgkin's disease)
Hodgkin-Paltauf-Sternberg disease (Hodgkin's disease)
Sternberg’s disease (Hodgkin's disease)
Pel-Ebstein fever (Hodgkin's disease)
Paltauf-Sternberg disease (Hodgkin's disease)
Hodgkin’s syndrome (Hodgkin's disease)
Hodgkin’s paragranuloma (Hodgkin's disease)
Hodgkin’s granuloma (Hodgkin's disease)
Bonfils' syndrome (Hodgkin's disease)
Bonfils' disease (Hodgkin's disease)
Hodgkin's disease
A neoplastic disease of unknown aetiology, considered to be a form of malignant lymphoma, producing enlargement of lymphoid tissue, spleen, and liver with invasion of other tissues.


I, myself, hate the incorrect use of *myself*
I wholeheartedly agree! My accounts do say I can correct *obvious* grammatical mistakes, so I REFUSE to type the word *myself* when used incorrectly; I consistently edit to *me* where indicated.

When exactly did the word *me* become so unimportant? It's news to me, or, as the some of our dictators might say, "It's news to myself." LOL.

Similarly, there's the age-old misuse of the pronoun *I* as the object of a preposition, when the correct pronoun would again be *me.* Some people will do anything to avoid the little ol' word *me.*

I guess you're right--*me* just sounds too ordinary. Maybe we should change that old saying to *Fool myself once, shame on you; fool myself twice, shame on myself.* I wonder if anyone would think THAT sounds sophisticated.
incorrect! it's on the diagonal...

That is incorrect. There is no money sm
in being a doctor anymore.  The days of the doctor who had a mansion on the hill in town are gone.  The money is gone, replaced by the headaches caused by the insurance companies who are directing care in this country, the administrators of giant healthcare systems trying to run facilities instead of medical staff and every year the insurance companies pay less and less on a visit, procedure or test.
look up each definition..and it is drug-eluting stent. with hyphen.
nm
That should be fine except for the hyphen (type 2 is not a compound modifier). nm
nm
Stedmans has it with NO hyphen; that's how I've been typing for years. NM

I don't know, but the AHDI will probably want to get rid of that hyphen in Fisher-Price to save a
nm
It's ELUTING. Your QA person is incorrect (tsk tsk). nm
nm
i forgot, they also learn how to use incorrect
verbiage and dictate in a whisper, in a crowded room with the television blaring in the background and they learn how to dictate without having to hold the microphone - they learn to lay it down and dictate so that the dictation also has all the background noise for the Transcriptionist to get share with them.