Originally Posted by Dixielee
I have also considered trying this as an option to running around a busy ER all day. My question for those doing it is this....what will the climate be like in a few years when we are supposedly going to all electronic charting. Will there still be jobs or are all the docs going to have to do their own charting?
Our ER docs are already having to do most on the computer and they are not dictating anymore. Do you think it is worth investing the time and money now based on a not so certain future of employment?
There will probably always be doctors who live by the "old school" way and want to dictate anyway. (For the record, speech recognition has not taken over the MT role. Some MTs just work as speech editors instead of straight transcriptionists.) Apparently these threats of not needing transcriptionists anymore have lingered over our heads for a while now, but it's not happened yet. This electronic chart thing has not come to fruition by a long shot. Even when it does become widespread, there will be practitioners that want to dictate, which creates the need for the transcriptionist.
I have also never had the pleasure of doing ER transcription. The hospitals I have worked for must have a separate thing for ER notes like radiology transcription tends to be separate from acute care transcription and clinics separate from acute care and radiology. I will say, though, that my experience in acute care transcription (meaning I type everything from ENT to rheumatology to peds cardiology to ophthalmology in a day) demonstrates that there is still a decent market for good medical transcriptionists. The wonderful thing about MT is that there is a definite opportunity to run your own independent thing.
The only thing I can say is don't let your nursing license lapse for those thinking of making the change.