Wednesday, 29 December 2010

Key Benefits Of Medical Transcription Services


Medical transcription services are a valuable component of data management for any healthcare organization and present several benefits of companies of all sizes. Instead of investing the time and money to train employees of an organization for dictation capture and reporting, medical transcription services can manage all of these operations – and more. Medical transcription companies are a valuable outsourced resource for the healthcare industry, and there are several benefits for sending dictation projects to another party. Here are the key benefits of medical transcription services:
  1. HIPAA-compliant services. Medical transcription services are designed to be fully-HIPAA compliant and all data is secure. Secure data transmission is increasingly important today as files are transferred across the web and downloaded onto various interfaces. Medical transcription services can ensure all relevant data is encrypted and secured according to industry standards.
  2. Easy access to data any time of day. When your physicians need to access and retrieve specific pieces of data, medical transcription services make it easy to obtain the data from a phone or other digital device 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Files and information is stored in a secure central area where all members of your healthcare organization can have access to.
  3. Confidential information. Transcribed materials are stored in a highly secure server and database, and steps are taken to ensure all documents remain confidential. This is also in compliance with HIPAA laws and regional rules and regulations that require patient information to be kept confidential at all times.
  4. Access to customer service. If you’re experiencing technical difficulties in retrieving your information or have questions about any of the services from the company, medical transcription services available to you may include access to a toll-free phone number for customer support. Having the ability to interact with a customer service department takes away the stress of worrying about data transmission and transfer problems.
  5. Fast turnaround times. Most medical transcription services can be performed within 24-48 hours, which means you’ll have the projects completed within a reasonable time frame. When you need a dictation for a specific patient or client, it’s easy to contact the service provider for a faster turnaround if needed.
  6. Lowered costs overall. Outsourcing medical transcription services can cut costs dramatically for your healthcare organization so you can invest your resources in other departments and critical areas. Instead of spending the time to train and educate staff members about the process, you can count on a reliable company to manage all of the important elements of transcription.
  7. Improved workflow. Medical transcription services can be synced with your e-mail addresses and other contact management tools for improved workflow. This means you can expect to receive documents and data at a faster rate than conventional methods such as mail and package deliveries.
  8. High quality work. High quality documents and reports are essential for your organization, and medical transcription services from a reliable company will ensure the highest quality standards. Most companies employ an extensive quality control system to make sure every item is produced and distributed with accuracy.

Wednesday, 24 November 2010

Medical Transcription Service for Hospitals and Clinics


Cost-effective medical transcription services for hospitals and clinics are offered by reputable medical transcription companies.
At present, medical transcription services are in high demand in a variety of healthcare settings in the United States. Exclusive medical transcription services for hospitals and clinics are provided by recognized and experienced companies in the field.
Excellent Medical Transcription Service
Most medical transcription companies offer HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) compliant medical transcription service in a highly professional and affordable manner. Medical transcription involves the process of transcribing the dictations made by physicians and other healthcare professionals into medical reports. These records could be clinic notes, office notes, diagnostic procedure notes, discharge summaries, operative or consultation notes and SOAP notes.
Well-trained Transcriptionists to Handle the Demands
Medical transcription firms comprise a team of skilled and experienced medical transcriptionists, proofreaders and quality analysts to handle the transcription needs of hospitals and clinics. They utilize the best combination of tools and techniques including dictation equipments, dedicated servers and high-end computers with uninterrupted high speed internet. Well-trained medical transcribers in these firms offer medical transcription service in various specialties including orthopedics, cardiology, pediatrics, gastroenterology, internal medicine, radiology, chiropractic and podiatry.
Benefits Ensured by Service Providers
Service providers process records and maintain high accuracy levels up to 99%. Other service features include:
HL7 transcription interface
3 levels of quality assurance
Commitment to accuracy
Transferring of files: FTP and browser based 256 bit AES encryption protocol
Customized turnaround times
Convenient dictation methods: toll free number and digital dictation
Medical transcription service helps healthcare providers to improve overall efficiency and reduces the workload of staffs.
Find a Trustworthy Company
If you need medical transcription service, get in touch with a provider, who offers high quality service at the industry’s most competitive price structure. Before choosing the right provider, do a comparative study of various service providers and the price structures offered.

Friday, 29 October 2010

Medical Transcription and Voice Recognition


Medical transcription (MT) assignments are one of the highly acclaimed outsourced jobs in the healthcare industry and are mainly aimed at enabling US and UK based healthcare providers to have cost-effective solutions in maintaining day-to-day patient records. In the competitive healthcare arena where medical facilities are finding it difficult and expensive to maintain their own in-house transcription facilities, having these jobs outsourced spells huge savings in cost and effort. All major medical transcription service providers are now offering their medical transcription and voice recognition services in a highly customized and time-bound manner.
Voice recognition technology has a key role to play in medical transcription services
and is one of the major advancements being made in the transcription sector. Voice recognition technology uses computers to recognize doctors’ dictations but current technologies are not capable of providing 100% accuracy in the transcribed documents and hence all documents generated using voice recognition technologies still require manual proofreading to maintain the high accuracy levels required.
Almost all medical transcription facilities are now offering their services in accordance with the HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) regulations. These regulations ensure that all online transactions involving patient records are done in a safe and secure manner. The archival facilities provided by transcription firms are highly beneficial to clients as retrieval and transmission of patient records in future will be much easier.
To have accurate documentation of medical reports, most MT facilities have employed highly skilled and trained transcriptionists. The proofreaders and editors working in these medical transcription facilities make sure that all processed records maintain high accuracy levels of up to 99%. Most of these medical transcription facilities take care to update the knowledge base of their employees so that they remain well informed about the latest developments in medical treatments and medicines. This helps them handle their jobs easily and accurately.
The medical transcription facilities also have a number of related services for their clients which include medical coding and medical billing. To provide benefits for the healthcare industry on the whole, most medical transcription providers are now offering their services for a wide range of healthcare clients. Healthcare clients in the US who are heavily dependent on medical transcription and voice recognition services include private practitioners, hospitals, clinics, long term care facilities and acute care centers. Medical transcription firms provide their services for short term as well as long term requirements and hence all categories of medical care providers are ensured smooth functioning and timely completion of assigned jobs.

Monday, 27 September 2010

Outsourcing Medical Billing


In the past few years there is a dramatic change in the medical field and its treatment. Initially, while processing the insurance claims there are many administrative difficulties during the preparation of insurance policy procedures and dealing with complicated claim forms. To overcome with these obscurity doctors look out for outside help, and hire representatives to advise them, attend information about insurance company seminars, and provide them with regular clear financial reports.
This is process is called as medical billing outsourcing. Outsourcing Medical Billing acquire a profound working knowledge of the technologies and processes that are decisive to successful Business Process Outsourcing and afford a absolute scale of Back Office Outsourcing services in the areas of Medical Billing, Claim Adjudication, Call Center and Financial service. The most of the physician time is saved by means of medical billing outsourcing process. So that, physicians can much more concentrate on curing their patients. A medical billing firm will have the knowledge and experience technocrats to take care of all the medical billing issues. It makes free the other staff to concentrate on other aspects of running the practice which leads to added security to finance and transactions.
In a medical billing process all those claims will be submitted more quickly and follow-up will be more persistent-all adding up to more and quicker revenue for the practice. Medical billing firm will provide all the reports by means of monthly and detailing the financial health of the practice and can recommend ways to boost profitability as well. It process is used to improve the business and may not depend on individual to maintain the details. So the usage of medical billing outsourcing is very reliable to change medical billing expenses from a fixed cost to a variable cost and to improve the ability to manage our business.
A medical billing firm gives the detailed information that need to successfully negotiate a contract with a malpractice insurance carrier. The benefits of medical billing outsourcing include less paperwork and lower employee cost, minimized error and faster revenue receives. For minimized error the perfect audition is done by the supervisor. After the approval of supervisor the claims are sent to the process of revenue. One of the major advantage of medical billing outsourcing is it assists the physicians in saving money through payroll generation, equipment reduction, elimination of postage, and with software service support. Outsourcing to a professional billing company frees you from administration problems.
One of the important things has to be noted is while choosing the medical billing outsourcing the costs varies directly with the medical billing. If the medical billing drops, the cost drops. If the medical billing goes higher, then the costs do not rise suspiciously. This is the simple fact that makes the business planning easier. Outsourcing Medical Billing handles your Billing and Collections. Outsourcing to Offshore Medical billing will reduce your overhead while decreasing the claim payment turn around time. Enjoy the benefits of Outsourcing Medical Billing, Accounts Receivable Follow-up responsibilities to the experienced professionals in the Offshore Center.

Sunday, 22 August 2010

The Role and Relevance of Medical Transcription to EMR Adoption


The U.S. healthcare system initiative to develop a national electronic health record (EHR) infrastructure by 2014 aims to successfully share and exchange health information and support personal health records for all Americans. When ambulatory healthcare organizations are unsuccessful in adopting electronic medical records (EMR) technology into their practices, interoperability for health information exchange (HIE), personal health records (PHR) and a national EHR will be limited.
In a recently published Speech Recognition Adoption White Paper written by the Medical Transcription Industry Association (MTIA) and the Association for Healthcare Documentation Integrity (AHDI, formerly AAMT), a great deal of emphasis was placed on the role medical transcriptionists must continue to play in driving a successful national EHR. In summary, the paper indicated that though many EMR and Speech Recognition technology providers have taken aim at medical transcriptionists (MTs) as being a costly and obsolescent part of healthcare documentation, the limits of EMR and speech recognition technology (SRT) are being significantly complemented by the work of MTs in cases where solution providers and savvy healthcare organizations have recognized the value of the relationship between technology and MT “knowledge workers”.
The white paper further offers a state of affairs in the world of speech recognition and compares frontend speech recognition (FESR) with backend speech recognition (BESR). FESR is the process whereby speech-to-text translation occurs real-time with the creation of a narrative dictation, typically for concurrent correction by the dictator. BESR is the process whereby the speech-to-text translation occurs subsequent to the creation of a narrative dictation, typically for later correction by a third party (such as an MT).
When comparing FESR with BESR it was found that enterprise healthcare organizations experienced significant success with BESR by routing work translated through a speech recognition engine to an MT for later correction. This method supported clinicians’ ability to narratively dictate without changing their habits and therefore was widely accepted as an effective documentation method. Further, because cost savings were generally realized, CFOS supported BESR adoption. Typically 80% of clinicians were adaptable to BESR with no change in dictation habits, and higher for certain specialties like radiology. With MTs typically producing 1.5 to 2 times the volume over that of conventional transcription, BESR has proven to be an effective option for documenting health records. The accuracy of speech-to-text translation using BESR improves over time by comparing the corrected reports to a dictator’s speech patterns thereby improving the translation algorithms over time.
FESR has also made strides in the past decade. Gone are the days of sitting in front of a computer and recording thousands of words to train the recognizer. Like BESR, FESR learns and improves with repetition and can “learn” from completed, corrected documents. The trouble with FESR that many clinicians find objectionable is the need to interact with the process to make real-time corrections, thereby causing a change in dictation habits and slowing the clinician down. Although there is an upside (real-time documentation means immediate completion for the chart) in most situations that value is diminished by the extra time it takes the clinician to compete the record, the associated costs of that clinician time, and the fact that turnaround time (TAT) via a backend process is usually adequate.
According to Claudia Tessier, VP of Medical Records Institute, in her article, Medical Transcription and EMRs: Opportunity Lost? FESR represents less than 3% of clinical documentation. On the other hand, back-end speech recognition (BESR) has made significant gains in clinical documentation this decade with hospitals and major healthcare systems effectively deploying the technology enterprise-wide.
If clinician documentation habits are relevant to adoption, it’s no surprise then that ambulatory EMR adoption has delivered such abysmal results. According to the American Medical Association (AMA), the cost of an ambulatory EMR per clinician averages $30,000. If cost is not enough of a barrier to adoption, then usability certainly is. Next time you visit your primary care physician and have your medical record manually documented into an EMR by your physician while seeing you, ask how much he/she likes the process. If you are a clinician, then you understand. Though many EMR technologies are impressive, the documentation process is not well-embraced when it distracts from the intimacy of the patient encounter or slows the documentation process down to the point that fewer patients can be seen.
In an article by Peter Waegemann, CEO of Medical Records Institute and Chair of the TEPR Conference, despite a national initiative to have complete adoption of EMR technology by the year 2014, the above-referenced findings by the New England Journal of Medicine study clearly reflect that something is “drastically wrong”, that “it is time to stop and have a hard look at what needs to be changed”, and that “it is time for all the committees, associations, and others who are touting EMRs to confront this dismal picture” and find ways to help “correct [several] areas in our national strategy”.
The areas Mr. Waegemann identifies as problematic? Cost, Information Capture, Legality, Functionality, Information Exchange, Continuity of Care. Regarding Information Capture, Mr. Waegemann states, “Another main hurdle is the process of getting information into the computer”, continuing by noting that “electronic documentation is disruptive, may take a little longer, and requires a change in habits.”
Clinician behavior is unlikely to change if the pressure of time and efficiency continue to drive the culture of healthcare. If EMR usability also continues to challenge clinicians, then the role of the MT may, in fact, be extremely relevant in helping to meet the current EMR adoption challenges. As noted by the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) in a Practice Brief entitled Speech Recognition in the Electronic Health Record, “MTs are poised to evolve into clinical data, data quality, and decision support specialists.” The challenge to MTSOs, Healthcare Provider organizations and EMR providers is to work cooperatively to develop and promote solutions that match this charge.
In her article, Friend or Foe, published in For the Record, Robin Daigh, a VP at MD-IT, aptly addresses that it is the blend of technology and service solutions needed to meet the present EMR adoption dilemma. In this article Ms. Daigh notes that of the three documentation options (direct data entry, FESR and narrative dictation) that “many EMR vendors with whom we’ve spoken [indicate] dictation is the preferred choice of 80% of doctors.”
Ms. Daigh continues with a relevant illustration about documentation time and costs, noting the example of a typical outpatient visit to an internist and indicating that it takes about one minute to dictate a note for an established patient and costs about $4.30 versus 5 minutes and cost of about $13.50 to document the encounter directly into an EMR:
“By contrast, many EMRs use [direct] structured data entry as the primary method for entering clinical notes, in which physicians point and click their way through drop-down menus. The time required is at best equal to that of a transcribed note, and physicians often report it takes 8 to 10 minutes to complete a note using structured data entry, meaning the indirect cost to physicians is anywhere from $13.50 to $27.” states Daigh. “Indeed, physicians may ‘save’ $1.60 in outsourced transcription expense but at the cost of their valuable time. In our experience, this loss of productivity with [direct] structured data entry is the single biggest barrier to physician EMR adoption. By contrast, transcription customers are delighted to learn they can continue to dictate and let the transcription service deliver the clinical note to their EMR.”
Medical Transcription (with or without SRT) is relevant to documentation because it is the companion of narrative dictation, and narrative dictation holds a key advantage: the documentation of complete and accurate records. In another New England Journal of Medicine publication, Off the Record – Avoiding the Pitfalls of Going Electronic the article authors note that template-based documentation may distract from the important cognitive work of providing care, limiting thoughtful review and analysis. “Although completing such templates may help physicians survive a report-card review, it directs them to ask restrictive questions rather than engaging in a narrative-based, open-ended dialogue.”
In its traditional form Medical Transcription still services a significant percentage of the industry; coupled with speech recognition (BESR), it enables scalable deployment across enterprise healthcare; with HL7-based integration it feeds enterprise EMR systems with unstructured data health records; with emerging BESR technologies it feeds those same systems with structured data health records, leading to improved decision support; and in response to the endemic ambulatory EMR adoption problem it offers a bridge to acceptable usability.
Medical Transcription in fact holds a relevant role in documentation and in helping solve the ambulatory EMR adoption dilemma, vital to the future of healthcare interoperability and the national EHR initiative. Moving forward, organizations that are focused on providing integrated solutions that leverage both technology and service offerings will lead to an increase in EMR adoption and ultimately improved patient care.

Monday, 26 July 2010

HIPAA Compliant Medical Transcription


Various healthcare settings in the United States including hospitals, clinics, long term acute care centers and healthcare centers are on the lookout for HIPAA compliant medical transcription service. To meet their requirements, top-quality, professional service providers offer medical transcription services that observe all the rules stipulated by HIPAA. HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) is the standard for electronic exchange of patient data in audio format into written text format. HIPAA compliant medical transcription ensures total confidentiality of patient data.
Comprehensive Transcription Solutions Maintaining Excellent Standard
An HIPAA compliant medical transcription company offers services in preparing a wide range of medical records including clinic notes, office notes, x-ray reports, operative reports, history and physical reports, letters, psychiatric evaluations, emergency room notes, consultation notes, discharge summaries, pathology reports and laboratory reports.
Professionals in these companies meet the medical transcription requirements of any facility utilizing state-of-the-art equipment, software technologies and techniques. To compete in this field, most providers make use of the services of highly skilled and experienced medical transcriptionists. In order to ensure 99% accuracy of the medical records, the service providers have in-house proofreaders, quality analysts and editors.
Advantages of Quality Medical Transcription Service
Today, most HIPAA compliant medical transcription companies aim at processing medical records in a cost-effective and time-saving manner. Incorporating the provision for toll-free telephone dictation, companies offer the best client-specific transcription service, which guarantees secure transmission; exceptional quality; HIPAA-compliant electronic delivery; unlimited storage and retrieval capabilities and 24-hour or STAT turnaround time.
Benefits of HIPAA compliant medical transcription service:
• Ensures privacy of patient records and data
• Increased efficiency
• Avoids fines and criminal penalties
• Streamlined process workflow
• Public exposure risk is low
Find the Provider Committed to Giving You the Best Service
If you need the support of a medical transcription company, find the right provider that would ideally meet your requirements. Other than medical transcription services, these firms also offer medical billing and coding services.

Wednesday, 23 June 2010

The New Medical Transcription Scenario


The challenge for any medical transcription company is to enable a seamless coordination of medical care. This coordination can be provided by electronic system of medical records. This system enables seamless transmission of medical data from one doctor to another. If incorporated this system helps to provide coordinated, safe and cost effective care.
An estimated 1% to 7% of the patients have a medication error during their stay at the hospital. The medical records provide a foundation for a support system that enables a check on these kinds of errors.
The need of the hour for the transcription companies is to evolve around the electronic medical record system. Also, the companies need to understand their position in the current day scenario and also learn where they are moving to in the future.
A safe and effective medical care can not be provided without a seamless movement to medical data. This is the most exciting change that is happening all around us and the next three to four years will be the most important in the process to ensure that the timely and accurate medical data is always available to the doctor on the web with the oversight of a transcriptionist to ensure its accuracy.
The medical transcriptionist is the first line of defense in providing the accurate and the timely care that he needs by providing the necessary documentation. Though a transcriptionist works at the background but plays an important and integral part in providing safe and effective care to the patients.

Friday, 21 May 2010

Healthcare, Online Medical Transcription and Medical Billing: What’s Involved?


Anyone who watches the evening news or picks up a national news magazine will recognize one thing to be true: Healthcare has become one of the fastest growing industries in the United States.
With such an explosion of the healthcare industry taking place, more and more people are embarking on careers in the healthcare system in two fields that have logically benefited from this growth: medical transcription and medical billing. These two fields compose vital organs of the medical industry body itself. To participate in such a necessary field will be both challenging and rewarding, as these fields continue to grow and evolve.
What exactly is medical transcription?
Medical transcription, also known as “MT,” is a healthcare profession which involves the converting voice-recorded reports as dictated by doctors and other healthcare professionals into text format. This is most often done on a PC, using a data entry program. Often this type of position can be done from home, widening its appeal to those with both financial needs and a need to remain at home due to family constraints. Likewise, taking the medical transcription courses online is a natural transition to working from home.
And what exactly is “medical billing”?
Medical billing has become one of the most popular careers in the nation. HMOs, PPOs, managed care, and private physicians need employees to process the claims forms and other paperwork associated with insurance plans, strictly adhering to procedural protocol between the insurance companies and the medical provider. As a result, the medical billing specialist must be detail-oriented, have a precise and detailed work style, and understand the complexities of insurance billing.

Saturday, 17 April 2010

Medical Transcription and Dictation Services


These days, medical transcription and dictation services are provided to various healthcare settings including clinics, nursing homes, hospitals, healthcare centers and long term acute care centers. Medical transcription is one of the IT related challenging services that require outstanding execution skill with professionalism.
Nature of Work
Medical transcription and dictation services comprise the conversion of a physician’s audio files into written transcripts. The process involves the following steps-
-Physicians dictate their notes into a digital recording device, which involves toll-free phone lines, PC dictation and handheld digital recorders
-Transfer of these voice recordings to transcribers via a file transfer protocol (FTP)
-Medical transcriptionist transcribes the audio files into text format
-Transcribed reports are sent back via browser based secure 256 bit AES encrypted file transfer protocol
Transcription Companies Offer Perfect Solutions
There are many transcription companies that offer medical transcription and dictation services to improve your overall efficiency and patient care. Based on customer requirements, they prepare chart notes, rehabilitation notes, radiography reports, radiology reports, history and physical reports, discharge summaries, progress reports, psychiatric evaluations, emergency notes and SOAP notes.
Medical transcription providers utilize advanced dictation and transcription systems, and meet all HIPAA regulations for electronic transmission of patient information.
Advantages of Medical Transcription and Dictation Services
-Competitive pricing
-Pragmatic and flexible approach
-Streamline information workflow
-Increase efficiency
-Secured access for authorized users to all transcribed reports
-Quick turnaround time
-High data accuracy and security
-Secured access for authorized users to all transcribed reports
-HL7-Based EMR integration capabilities
Approach a Competent Medical Transcription Firm
Find a reliable medical transcription company to benefit from high quality medical transcription and dictation services. While choosing such a service provider, consider the three most important factors – accuracy, turnaround time and security.

Sunday, 14 March 2010

EHR Adoption Success Directly Linked to Transcription: Industry Associations Take Solution-Focused Message to Capitol Hill


WASHINGTON – (Business Wire) The proven ability for medical transcription to facilitate accurate, cost-effective EHR adoption will be the key message brought by the members of the Association for Healthcare Documentation Integrity (AHDI) and the Medical Transcription Industry Association (MTIA) to federal legislators on Capitol Hill when the associations convene in Washington, DC, for their annual Advocacy Summit. With the HITECH Act, the Obama Administration’s high priority on nationwide EHR adoption has opened an opportunity for the transcription sector to educate the current Administration and Congress about the need for contemplative, prudent migration to the EHR – one that preserves the role of complex narrative and engages human intelligence in ensuring the accurate, secure capture of patient healthcare encounters.
The Advocacy Summit, being held June 3-4, 2009, in Washington, DC, will focus on the need for standards and regulations in EHR technology integration/adoption, the role of transcription in safeguarding protected health information (PHI), and the need for workforce development funding in healthcare documentation to ensure a knowledgeable.
“Healthcare can ill afford a knee-jerk reaction to the EHR requirements of the HITECH Act,” states Peter Preziosi, PhD, CAE, AHDI/MTIA chief executive officer. “Successful EHR adoption and meaningful interoperability hinge on healthcare’s ability to set standards that promote efficient, cost-effective, quality-driven data capture solutions. The transcription sector is uniquely positioned to offer healthcare delivery the means to make that happen, and that’s what we’ll be sharing with this new Administration and the new Congress.”
The associations will take to the Hill their Transcription: Proven Accelerator to EHR Adoption whitepaper, which includes compelling statistics that demonstrate (a) the loss of income to physicians who integrate EMR/EHR technologies ineffectively, (b) the critical role of transcription technology solutions in facilitating better EHR adoption, (c) the value of solutions that create “rich, interrelated narratives” rather than cookie-cutter records, and (d) the irreplaceable role of a knowledge worker in data integrity management.
About AHDI
The Association for Healthcare Documentation Integrity (AHDI), has been the professional organization representing medical transcriptionists since 1978. AHDI sets standards of practice and education for medical transcriptionists, administers a dual credentialing program, has established a code of ethics, and advocates on behalf of the profession. For more information, visit www.ahdionline.org.
About MTIA
The Medical Transcription Industry Association (MTIA) is the world’s largest trade association serving medical transcription service operators. Its mission is to create an environment in which medical transcription companies can prosper, grow, and deliver the highest level of healthcare documentation services. For more information, visit www.mtia.com. The two associations formed a strategic legal partnership in 2007 to pool critical resources and collaborate on key initiatives focused on optimizing healthcare delivery.

Tuesday, 16 February 2010

Transcription Technology Watch


This is the first in a series of quarterly articles that will focus on technologies relevant to medical transcription. Hopefully, maybe even those MTs who are techno-phobic will find some of the topics enlightening, stimulating and/or of value in making career decisions. But maybe not. To challenge that hope, I’ve started off with everyone’s favorite technology: speech recognition. If you want to really stimulate a transcriptionist, just say “speech recognition.” Or, better yet, assert that “speech recognition will forever change the process of converting physicians’ thoughts and utterances into text.” Then run for cover.
Every transcriptionist out there has heard some form of that assertion. Their reactions range from dismissal to fear to anger. So what’s the truth? What does the future hold? Well, at some point in the future, there will be no medical transcription. Physicians will dictate into a PC or portable device; their speech will be converted to text; and the dictator will make any necessary corrections to finalize the report. No transcription expense. No transcription delay. But that future is at least 3 years off. Just kidding. It’s way more than that. However, there is a future closer than that, related to speech recognition, which has some major implications for this industry.
Doctors hate doing anything that they believe is below their stature or slows down their ability to generate revenue. So we will not see “front-end” recognition-where they correct their own mistakes as described above-in most environments for many years. But there’s a new game in town. It’s called “back-end” speech recognition. Physicians don’t change a thing in their dictation behavior. They continue babbling into telephones or some other dictation device just like they always have. But their voice files are now run through a server-based recognition engine, a draft is produced, and a medical editor corrects the errors both in recognition and dictation.
This technology is truly beginning to get some traction. Physicians love innovation, but they hate change. So this suits them just fine. In fact, they typically don’t even know it’s going on. The goal of back-end speech recognition is to at least double the productivity of transcriptionists. And to do it for about a penny a line. Most implementations are not quite there yet. Speech recognition talk has always been ahead of speech recognition technology. Nonetheless the handwriting is on the wall. This technology will begin to transform transcription in the coming years. So it seems wise for MTs to learn more about it and perhaps even to embrace it.if they like what they learn.
Currently, it is prohibitively expensive for an independent transcriptionist or small transcription company to purchase a recognition server. However, there are a number of ASPs popping up, which charge by the line to produce a draft. I could tell you a lot more groovy stuff about this rather exciting technology, but I’m just about out of my allotted space. So tune in next quarter for the second Watch article, which will explain more about how it works and what it means for medical transcriptionists. Unless, of course, I feel like writing about something else.

Tuesday, 19 January 2010

Medical Transcription and EMR


Professional medical transcription companies provide excellent EMR solutions.
With the introduction of the EMR system, medical transcription has become more reliable, cost-effective and systematic. The EMR solution effectively manages records such as death summaries, radiology images, photographs, histories, clinic notes, consultation reports, referrals, laboratory summaries, medical billing, verifications, authorizations, medical coding and patient scheduling. One of the major advantages of EMR is that it permits clients to add, delete and edit records and other medical notes.
Ensures High Accuracy Rates in Transcription
EMR is a typical database system that helps medical practices to make digital formats ensuring high accuracy rates in the transcription process. Professional medical transcription service providers offer excellent EMR solutions, giving maximum automation and security for SOAP notes and other medical data. The latest features of EMR solution include:
-Management of SOAP notes
-Document scanning
-Customized data management
-Medical billing software
-Specialist support for medical billing
-Diagnosis code directory
-HL7 custom interfaces
The Advantages of EMR System in Medical Transcription
An EMR system provides physicians and medical professionals with uncomplicated interface and legible documentation. It helps to convert medical documents into PDF with electronic signature so that the files can be easily sent over the internet. The EMR system runs on a UNIX server that ensures the unique security features of UNIX. You are not required to buy any expensive hardware or software; all you require is a computer with internet connection. The advantages of the EMR system include:
-Reduces storage costs
-On-site and off-site storage facilities
-Reduces human resources
-Lessens transcription errors
-Affordable and systematic
-Speeds workflow
-Various types of data can be stored
-Specific EMR solutions for various specialties
The application of EMR system in medical transcription services ensures high accuracy rates together with a perfect management system to meet specific requirements of the clients.