Medical Transcription Job and Resume Assistance comes with
our Medical Transcription Course. There are many links / pages
to visit on this site to give you even further information
about Medical Transcription as a work at home career that will
be useful to you.
Below is information on the "true facts"
about getting hired as a New Medical Transcriptionist
after proper Training! We will not mislead you in any
way and will tell you both the pros and cons of
finding work starting out as a New MT! There are
plenty of jobs for New MTs and we will tell you the
facts, and only the facts - no unrealistic promises of
getting started as a New MT! Information on getting
hired As a New Medical Transcriptionist.
You may have heard that it's impossible
to get a job as a medical transcriptionist unless you have
experience. Usually, the person telling you this is an
experienced medical transcriptionist who never quite
explains how she and tens of thousands of other medical
transcriptionist managed to get their first jobs. The fact
is that medical transcription services have to hire new
Medical Transcriptionists, whether they want to or not.
The demand for medical transcription is
growing at such a rate that there are not enough
experienced Medical Transcriptionists to service the
accounts, and this situation is going to intensify over the
next few decades as baby-boomers age and demand increasing
health care services. Transcription services that refuse to
hire new Medical Transcriptionists are faced with two
choices: they can turn down accounts, or they can pay a
premium in both compensation and benefits in an effort to
attract experienced Medical Transcriptionists from their
current employers.
So what does it take to get your foot in
the door? You need to have Proper Training, high accuracy
and productivity, and familiarity with professional tools.
In other words, there is no secret. There is a simple fact:
if you have been tested to transcribe the Basic 4 at 250
lines per hour with 98% accuracy, and you know and use
digital equipment, you'll have no trouble finding a
transcription service that will give you a chance to prove
yourself.
Don't be misled by claims of various
training vendors. Few transcription services could care
less where you got your training. They only want to know
that you can produce at professional levels, because they
get paid on productivity, just like the Medical
Transcriptionist's they hire. So why do so many help-wanted
ads ask for experienced only?
One of the reasons is because when
people wanting to "work at home" that have "no experience"
in certain careers, look for the words "no experience
required" in job ads! Therefore; hundreds and even
sometimes thousands of people will apply to "any" job ad
that says "no experience" and do not bother to look at the
clause of what the "no experience." is for. Another words,
they will assume it is for a Data Entry, or Word
Processing, job instead of reading that it actually says
"no prior work experience needed" for Trained MTs! When
this many people apply to these no experience. MT job ads
it overwhelms the Doctor office, Hospitals, etc.
They do not have the staff to go through thousands of
non-qualified resumes, letters to try to find the "New MTs"
that do have the prior training with being New, but no
prior work experience. It became easier for them to place
the job openings for the NEW MTs with colleges, MT Training
Schools, and programs that offer job placement assistance
so that they can refer the resumes of the qualified trained
Medical Transcriptionists
This saves the Doctors from being overwhelmed with resumes
of people looking for Data Entry, Word Processing, etc. and
actually gets Real New MT Resumes instead! Another reason
is because many people who apply for medical transcription
jobs have not been adequately trained.
Even courses that provide sufficient
training in terminology usually ignore training in
professional tools and techniques /report format. As one
employer recently said, "Oh sure, they can recite the ten
major body systems. Unfortunately, they can't transcribe
more than 100 lines per hour." A "line" consists of 65
keystrokes, including characters and spaces, but not
including formatting keystrokes, such as Tab or Return.
To give you an idea of what that
translates to in typing speed, a person who can type 54
words per minute would, in theory, produce 300 lines per
hour. However, for a medical transcriptionist to produce
300 lines per hour, she must know her terminology and use
professional tools, because medical typing is more
complicated than business or personal typing. And 54 words
per minute is just barely adequate typing speed for a
medical transcriptionist.
Again, the Doctors can depend on the
places they place the job openings with to refer the
qualified MTs that have had adequate training and can
transcribe the number of lines required with the proper
Accuracy as well. Understand that Job Assistance means just
that "assistance"! No company, school, or college can
guarantee you a job unless they are hiring you
themselves!
There are too many variables involved in
the hiring process. We cannot read the Dr's mind in which
they will or will not hire! No one can! If they tell you
otherwise then you need to be concerned about the honesty
of the company you are considering to take your training
through! Job Assistance means that your resume is referred
over to the Doctors Office, Hospital, etc. that has placed
the job opening for the New MT.
It also may involve putting your resume
online in an online resume database or private search area
for the Dr's' to search through. Again, Job Assistance does
not mean you are placed "directly" into an
MT job after training.
It can take an average of 1 - 3 months for most new MTs to
get into their 1st MT job position. This varies depending
on if you have any medical background such as Nurses that
have much more medical background. Nurses, Medical
Assistants, Etc .usually will be able to get into an MT
position much faster after proper Transcription Training
because of their background. Don't walk - RUN - from any
training vendor who tells you 35 words per minute are
adequate.
This is absolutely untrue! You will have trouble
getting a job if you can't type a minimum
of 60 words per minute, and employers routinely expect 70+
words per minute. However, accuracy is even more important
than how fast you type. How fast you type can determine
your average pay, however low accuracy can cost you the job
position. Most companies would like to see 98% accuracy in
your transcription work.
As a professional medical
transcriptionist, the keyboard is one of your primary
tools, and professionals are expected to demonstrate
expertise with their tools. Students who don't have
adequate typing speed and accuracy can gain the skills they
need with inexpensive software programs designed to teach
typing skills.
There are many excellent programs
available for $25 or less that can be used to increase
typing skills while the student is studying medical
transcription. No student should allow slow typing speed to
derail their career.
Anyone who is not suffering a physical
disability can learn to type 70+ words per minute. It
hasn't been that long since secretaries were expected to
type at least 72 words per minute on manual typewriters! In
summary, the only secret to breaking into medical
transcription is competency.
If you hear someone say they took medical transcription
training but no one was willing to hire them without
experience, ask them to explain to you what a hematocrit is
and tell you its normal values, ask them how fast they
transcribe the Basic 4 and at what accuracy level, ask them
if they own a digital transcriber. Somewhere among the
answers, you'll get a blank stare or a response that will
clarify the real reason they can't get a job.
As a professional medical transcriptionist, you must know
your terminology, know and use professional tools, and
possess adequate keyboarding skills. Why should any
transcription service, or student, expect less?