Voice Recognition And Medical Transcription
by: Mila Sidman
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You’ve probably heard different opinions and views on this subject. If you’re a medical transcriptionist you may even be concerned
about voice recognition taking over your career… and you’re not alone.
Let’s dig a bit deeper into voice recognition.
As a transcriptionist you will have typed through background noise, patients moaning, doctors eating their lunch, personal conversations
(oops they forgot the recorder was on) and other incomprehensible noise. Not to mention, ESL doctors with heavy accents and very tired
ER doctors after a long shift!
At this time there is no voice recognition software which can handle this type of voice recognition. It is impossible for the software
to determine actual speech from mistakes in conversation, background noise, heavy accents, etc.
If a doctor is willing to sit down and take the sufficient time to train his voice recognition software to recognize his voice
and speech patterns (this takes time and is not done automatically), yes it is possible.
If the doctor thereafter dictates very
clearly, using proper punctuation in his speech (stopping for periods, pausing for commas) without any background noise or interruptions.
Yes, it is possible.
Will the document be 100% accurate?
No.
Remember medical records have to be in compliance with a number of very strict regulations. Most doctors, will not trust voice recognition
enough to send these records through without at least a quick glance through.
Even under the best dictating circumstances the
report will still need to be proofread and edited. So, yes under the “perfect” circumstances, voice recognition can replace a transcriptionist.
Is it likely? Not unless every physician out there is willing to take the time, energy and ongoing effort to train their voice recognition
software and maintain a certain standard of dictation. I don’t see that happening any time soon. Doctors are busy people, remember?
If anything, us MTs should embrace voice recognition and use it as a tool to help us in our MT careers. If applied properly, it can
be a time-saving tool. So why not use it for our purposes?
As with any business to stay ahead of the game you have to adapt
to change and technology. Learn how to use it to your advantage instead of being frightened by it. That’s the only way to stay ahead
of the competition…. Voice recognition or otherwise.
As you already know, doctors are busy people. This is never more obvious then when they’re dictating their notes. It’s understandable
they’re busy, and as their MT, I can surely forgive them but will the latest voice recognition software be as forgiving as me? Not
likely.
So what does this mean for our future?
Rumors of MTs being out of a job have been around long before I became an MT. Eight years
later, there are still no real advances in this field.
Can voice recognition ever replace transcriptionists?
Sure it can.
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