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Would the open positions be for acute care or clinic? FT or PT? Thx! nm

Posted By: Looking... on 2006-01-06
In Reply to: Let me know - Wondering....

s


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what is the difference between clinic and acute care reports?

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What program is not teaching the difference between acute care and clinic work?
I have seen quite a few questions about this lately and was just wondering.
Apply for clinic positions & then ask if any GE/GI is available. Otherwise, you get hit with a
s
clinic versus acute
acute care consists of patient care in the hospital from the time they are admitted until they are discharged (emergency room, history/physical, consultations, progress notes, lab/imaging data, transfers, and discharges are the most common). clinic notes are office visits (sometimes include consultations and maybe lab/imaging data). these are usually shorter dictations than the acute care.
Is this acute care?
My first MT job was as a secretary/transcriptionist at a doctor's office. I don't know how many lines I typed back in those days, but I remember training on acute care at the next job. I probably typed 400 lines my first day, but my mentor pushed me to keep making progress. If you are doing acute care, maybe they can start you on one particular work type to help you get your rhythm going, but they will be doing you a big favor if they agree to it. The other MTs will probably complain if they notice it. Maybe there is a particular work type nobody likes, like sleep studies, EEGs, EKGs, etc. At least it would give you a break from all the drug names, and the shorter reports don't seem so daunting to some newbies.
Acute care
  Sorry this question is so basic, but in classifides, what exactly does Acute Care experience mean?
Acute care is also known as the Big 4, which is
H&Ps
Consults,
OP notes,
Discharge summaries.

Sometimes ads will say acute care without OP notes, other times it will say heavy OP notes, other times just a mix. Acute care is extremely varied, covering dozens of specialties and hundreds of different dictators. Clinic work is usually easier just because there is more repetition of dictators and usually fewer specialties to learn. Besides these types there is radiology, pathology, and now and then you may see ER notes.



Acute Care?
I read a lot about "acute care". What exactly is this and why is so desired as a job?

Since I am still researching this career I'd like to know some of the basic job possibilities.

What is meant by the "Basic 4"?

Thanks to all!
Acute Care

I am a new Transcriptionist and have been looking for a company that will hire me right out of school.  I see alot of postings for ACUTE CARE.  What exactly is acute care, and why are there so many postings for it?


Thanks!


Acute care...

All right...I'm gonna do it, ask a very dumb question.  What kind of transcribing is "acute care"?  Is that by any chance transcribing for an emergency room at a hospital?  I see it all the time and have never really known what it applies to.


Acute care
Acute care is the basic 4; History and Physicals, Consultations, Discharge Summaries, Operative Reports, and usually Emergency Room reports thrown in the mix. Acute care is hospital work as opposed to clinic work where you type only office visits. Much more knowledge and experience needed to do Acute care.
ACUTE Care versus other.

What defines someone to be an acute care MT as to a multi-specialty MT.  What is the difference?  Sorry if this is a dumb question..


Thanks!


 


is it acute care or one specialty sm
progress notes? Progress notes are progress notes.
Not acute care but psychiatry
It is not acute care but psychiatry filse
Acute care understanding
What exactly is Acute Care??
Acute care is usually gonna be
your basic 4 worktypes. H&P's, Operative Reports, Consultations, and Discharge Summaries. Normally what you would transcribe in a hospital setting or working for a national that does transcription for a hospital.
What does acute care involve?
I have only typed clinic notes for an orthopedic surgeon. I have noticed that there are a lot of jobs for acute care and was just wondering.
What does acute care involve?
Basically, specialities you would encounter in a hospital setting, including surgical, procedures (i.e., cardiac catheterization, GI, GU, EEG, etc.), endocrine, neurology, hematology/oncology, internal medicine, etc. To name a few report types, discharge summaries, clinic notes, history & physical examinations, psychiatry, etc.
I started at 6.5 cpl for acute care.
I had 3 offers (2 of them before I even received my final exam scores):  One for 6 cpl no spaces, one for 5.5 cpl for straight transcription and 2.5 cpl for VR editing, and 6.5 cpl for acute care.  I took the 6.5 cpl since it was the highest cpl, but found that the account was awful.  It was mostly ESLs (probably more than 90%).  I could work a whole 8-hour shift without a single EFL (English as a first language) and most of the docs were new residents that had no idea how to dictate a report.  It was awful.  I had times where I could get 200-220 lph so I knew I could do the lines with decent doctors, but most days all I had were ESL residents and my average was more like 120 lph, so I didn't even make minimum wage.  I worked there for 6 months just to get the acute care experience and then began hunting for a better job.  I now work for a clinic that pays me 13.5 cpl and also for an MTSO that pays 7 cpl, but it took me several months of testing and turning down offers as I was not going to work for less than 7 cpl and did not want to work weekends. 
6.5 cpl for acute care and then to 7.5 within 6 months - NM
xx
What is considered acute care?
I know it is definately a newbie question, but what exactly is considered acute care versus clinical?  Can you give me some examples?  Thanks!!!
Has anyone used the AIM program for learning acute care? Can
s
Acute care would be a history and physical or
A clinical report would be what a physician dictates from his office when he sees patients.  Sometimes, it gets sketchy with outpatient surgery clinics.  Acute care is usually work dictated from a hospital setting and clinical work is dictated from a physician's office, which could be a cardiologist, urologist, etc. 
Acute care is also called basic 4, which is

H&Ps, discharges, Ops, and consults.  Clinic can vary from a doctor's office to an in-hospital clinic.  The in-hospital clinic might be a little more technical than an office and the format may/may not be similar. 


In my experience clinical is not a lot of medical terminology and the drugs tend to be the same ones over and over again.  I liked doing clinic work in that I knew what sickness was going around and what the recommended course of treatment was.  With clinical dictation you also tend to have the same doctors every time so you get to know them and can make lots of normals, which will have you producing more lines.  It can get boring though to have the same person over and over. 


The line rate is usually higher for acute care too. 


 


I did 10 years ago and have worked at home doing acute care ever since! sm
They prepare you for the real world of working from home.  It is worth every penny! 
try to stick to ACUTE care. You don't want to find yourself 'stuck' in one area.

Acute care is considered hospital transcription - discharges, history/physicals, consults, and op
s
Not open Yet!!!!
That's why they are not hiring?
ME too, I wish they would open it back up to us, with
strict rules and if you break them, you are out, that probably is too time-consuming, oh well. Great supportive board there.
Keep an open mind when looking for your first break.
For a first break into the business, you really need to welcome an in-office position. Not only is it a job doing what you say you want to do, but you may actually get guidance from an experienced MT and learn more than you could ever learn alone.
You open your voice files with sm
whatever software you're using for voice, i.e. Wavpedal, etc.  You don't open them in Word.
Get a solid education and doors will open
Many companies waive the 2-year experience requirement for testing if you attend M-Tec or Andrews. Their schools consistently produce grads who are ready to hit the ground running. I hire those grads every chance I get. I have found those with "local community college" education sorely lacking in even the basics to be a success.
Have you tried Open Office? It's free and very similar - see inside
http://www.openoffice.org/
MQ has a few positions available
nm.
GE Positions

Does anyone know of a transcription company which has an opening in GE?  This is my specialty, but I have been looking forever for an opening.  Any ideas?  Or...any ideas on how to get into recruiting MTs? 


Thanks,


Amanda


I think people with their eyes wide open are just trying to pass the news along...sm
to some unsuspected starry-eyed matchbook cover readers. A lot of MT's ARE going back to school and the ones that aren't are posting desparate posts saying "what else can I do?" I believe in being prepared...how are you going to go back to school if you don't have a job (or aren't saving some money now?) Believe me, I've been home with my kids too, and make a pretty penny doing this job. But I feel bad for all those people who A) sink thousands of dollars into getting their MT "certificate" from the schools, then B) come and post on this board with everybody else saying "how can we get experienc if no one will hire us, and C) knowing the MT rates are falling, not rising. Just want to give them a heads up on what the rest of us are seeing. Sure, there's a few folks that are still making good money BUT I've been in this field for 25 years now and there's a definite trend afoot here...
Newbie positions
I hire new MTs and I give them the experience. Granted it is harder for me but I do appreciate the opportunity I was given to get into the industry and now I am trying to give back.  I got into the business while on bedrest and pregnant with my daughter 10 years ago.  I am all about helping people.  However, I do think there are some people out there that take this job for granted.  If I hear one more person say to me "Oh I have a computer, I can do that job" I am going to scream.  You do have to be dedicated and you do have to put in the time.  I have gotten a couple of bad reviews from new MTs but the MTs that have negative things to say were the MTs that did not want to do the work or complained that it was too hard.  I have sent the same MT 4 or 5 different dictations or files in a row because there was one thing or another they felt was wrong with each one before it.  As a MTSO that is frustrating because sometimes the MT has to meet us in the middle.  If this job was so easy then everyone would be doing it and if you are as dedicated as you say you are then you just plain have to put in the time.
at-home positions

Its starting to sound like the lucrativeness of this "work at home" profession was too good to be true.  Just by what I see and hear, it seems nobody wants to hire a "newbie" and all require 2+ years of experience.  Where do they expect you to GET that experience if nobody wants to hire you?  As for working at home, that's the ONLY reason I chose this profession.  I wanted the flexibility in my schedule to be there for my daughter.  Now I'm getting discouraged right out of the gate.  As I mentioned, I have a 97% GPA and have an eye for detail.  I have an uncanny ability to spot grammatical errors.  My husband said my true calling is an editor, which I thought perhaps I'd have the ability to do as well in this field.  I'm still open to any and all suggestions.  I plan to send out letters of introduction to local area doctors and offer my services.  If anyone has any leads or other advice to offer, I'm all ears!


Thanks.


Jenn


There are positions where you can either download

work and work off-line or you work on-line and type directly into the company system or the hospital system.  If you are an independent contractor you can set your own hours.  There are some companies that have a 24-hour TAT.


You need to have schooling and/or training before you get to that point and that takes about 18 months or more.  There are some companies that won't allow offshore MTs, so even if an American that might limit your choices. 


in-hospital positions
You may have already, but also check out indeed.com. They have sometimes in-house positions also.
Sten-Tel has entry-level positions
nm
Have any newbies applied for the new Medware positions? Thanks. nm
xxxxxx
That is slightly less than most part time positions.
The average requirements run about 1200 lines for full time and 600 for part time (based on 65-character line). If this is a full-time position, it sounds like you may have found someone that will give you the opportunity to focus on quality instead of placing the emphasis on production right off the bat.
Multispecialty Clinic
Your experience sounds more like multispecialty clinic work than acute care and you would probably be much more comfortable with clinic work at this time.  Unfamiliarity with acute care will definitely slow you down, which will ultimately cut into your paycheck.  You might not have a problem doing work for a small hospital with limited procedures and limited specialties, but any larger hospital or teaching hospital is probably well beyond your skill level right now.
So it's better to start out in the clinic
area rather than the hospital setting? How do you find clinics who are hiring? I look in the paper and I don't see any.
No, I believe they mean they do many clinic specialties when they say that. (nm)
(nm)
If you do clinic work, I'm sure you
could find ophthalmology, but if you need a dependable income I'd suggest you not be that rigid.

One characteristic of most good MTs is that they like learning new things. There used to be a lot of money in repetitive reports, but less so now with VR and EMR technology, and foreign countries doing the work for lower pay, there isn't as much of that anymore.
clinic work
Spheris hires Career Step grads but only at 0.055, (at least you'll be home) and probably won't make more than 150 lines an hour, so you'll start out there making about $8.25/hour, they're clinic platform is easy, they have flexible hours, supervisors and QA people are good, they pay on time.
Need a Job! Experience in clinic and radiology

I am a new medical transcriptionist, I have some minimal experience, I have over $500 into books from stedman and also $300 in computer software! I have every single thing needed except the job! Please I need someone willing to work with me, and someone to understand that I am looking for something LONG TERM! I have experience with radiology and clinic specially. But also a dabble of others as well.


Please contact me via email. I will send you my resume. Blessings, Marilyn


RE: Need a Job! Experience in clinic and radiology
Look on the job board for OSi who posted today looking for cardiology transcriptionists.
Is Multispecialty Clinic paid the same?

Or is it less? I've done H&P, Consultation, and Discharge Summaries. Just no Op notes.


Thanks for  you help.