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Save from iscribe
Save from iscribe










save from iscribe

It made me waste time in tracking down exactly why I was getting a perfectly fine work rejected. I had to file tickets for it to get looked at and fixed. I also had jobs rejected and had to contest them, cause the editors that took my work and did their part for the final edit removed or moved parts of my transcript in a way that it made them auto-reject me. There are things you can do when stuff isn't understandable (ways to log it on the transcript), but I got reports back correcting me on things I dunno how they heard it or understand. I only have a bit of experience with TranscribeMe (don't know the other two) and, for the little time I spent there, I had a lot of trouble with audio quality. You can easily type while listening, add a foot pedal or have hot keys. I find ExpressScribe tears up the audio while Wreally keeps it clear. I prefer a website ($20/year) called that I was also introduced to through a Redditor. My answer to the second part is some people like Express Scribe. I found BabbleType by reading another Redditor's suggestion on a very similar post to yours. I'm pretty proficient with Afobe Audition so I'm capable of making tweaks to clean up audio if needed. I gave come across horrible audio, but that's by fault of the client, not the company. I completely enjoy my time there, the support staff, the on time payments, the rate paid, and the variety of transribable material in subject matter. All of the things mentioned in previous comments about YranscribeMe are unheard of with this company. I couldn't be luckier to have him, and he's pretty much what I aspire to be when I become a provider.Do you mean contract work transcribing (company's website), or a website/software to transcribe with?įor the first part, which is preferred company to transcribe for, I work for BabbleType. Sorry this got so long! I really cannot say enough good things about my doctor.

save from iscribe save from iscribe

That and his family's pretty well off, so he doesn't seem to mind eating the occasional loss from undercoded charts by new scribes. He's not as thorough as the other docs in documentation, but I think it's just from working so long in his specialty that he kinda already knows what to expect and can hone in on them. I can't help but wonder how well-adjusted his kids are gonna be having such a positive role model in their life (and I know he's got a great relationship with them hearing how dotes on them while talking to patients).Īs for his charts, he's also the easiest to work with. He does all this and somehow manages to be extremely patient as he's incredibly good at giving constructive criticism without making me feel bad (and I've done plenty of awfully dumb stuff as a freshly minted scribe). The crazy thing is that he's also the department leader of the floor, so he's already incredibly busy but still manages to make time for these pleasantries. With more senior scribes, he'll go over EKGs or MRIs with them. Sometimes he'll pull me in to look at x-rays with him and has recently felt comfortable quizzing me after we walk out the room. I've seen techs ask him about their online homework during lulls in the overnight shift, EMS approach him for guidance on reading their EKGs better or interpreting pt sx's, and him pulling nurses in to see certain procedures. Last Christmas he even bought cake and pizza for the entire floor as a thank you to the staff. Nurses and techs will stop and say hi to him, and EMS love to introduce their new co-workers to him. He greets everyone he happens to see that day by name, whether it's the custodian, the EMS, or the new resident who's training that day. My doctor is the definition of wholesome.












Save from iscribe