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	<title>Comments on: Are You Indispensable?</title>
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	<description>Tools for the Medical Transcriptionist</description>
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		<title>By: Kathy</title>
		<link>http://mttoolsonline.com/2010/01/30/are-you-indispensable/comment-page-1/#comment-31</link>
		<dc:creator>Kathy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Feb 2010 14:44:42 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Becky, thanks so much for the kind comments. What a wonderful story you share. Each of us has a story about how and why we got into medical transcription and I love hearing those. You pose a good question. I think you might start by making a pro and con list and see what you come up with. For me, I did the CMT for ME; at the time, the real value for me was knowing I did it and being able to put those letters on my business cards. I do think it&#039;s a very individual decision and each of us has to make.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Becky, thanks so much for the kind comments. What a wonderful story you share. Each of us has a story about how and why we got into medical transcription and I love hearing those. You pose a good question. I think you might start by making a pro and con list and see what you come up with. For me, I did the CMT for ME; at the time, the real value for me was knowing I did it and being able to put those letters on my business cards. I do think it&#8217;s a very individual decision and each of us has to make.</p>
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		<title>By: Becky Schultz</title>
		<link>http://mttoolsonline.com/2010/01/30/are-you-indispensable/comment-page-1/#comment-29</link>
		<dc:creator>Becky Schultz</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Feb 2010 04:13:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mttoolsonline.com/?p=148#comment-29</guid>
		<description>I read the post entitled &quot;Are you indispensable?&quot; I thought it was great.  I appreciate your commitment to this website.  I appreciate your willingness to share the story you are writing for your life in 2010. I have been doing medical transcription specializing in Cardiovascular and Cardiopulmonary for 12 years.  I actually was a legal transcpiptionist for 17 years working full-time in a law office.  I switched to medical transcription after I gave birth to my second son, Chad, who was born with Down Syndrome and numerous medical anomolies requiring numerous surgeries.   Through all of this, I became very interested in medical transcription and applied for a job at our local hospital just on weekends doing medical transcription in the cardiopulmonary department. I had done an at home study for beginning medical transcriptionists only, but applied for the job because of many years experience as a transcriptionist in the legal profession.  They were desperata as they had been without any help on the weekends for 2 months.  They hired me right away and said &quot;If you can do legal transcription, you can do medical.&quot;  And with a great CMT who trained me on the job in-house, I quickly began full-time work and worked 10 years in-house learning so much; working morning, noon, night and all night if the need arose. I genuinely wanted to make a difference and was willing to meet the demands of an in-house MT in a 24/7 hospital. I decided to work as MT from home because of Chad graduating from high school and his desire to take some day classes at a Christian College which is 45 minutes away. I knew if I could provide transportation for him, he could have this desire of his heart. I could do this working as MT from home with my own hours.

The concern I have is that I am not a CMT and I am questioning at 59 years of age and loving my specialty of Cardiovascular/Cardipulmonary if I really should now become certified.  I can work pretty much 24/7 with the company I work for. I have since working from home done a course online in medical terminology which was very helpful.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I read the post entitled &#8220;Are you indispensable?&#8221; I thought it was great.  I appreciate your commitment to this website.  I appreciate your willingness to share the story you are writing for your life in 2010. I have been doing medical transcription specializing in Cardiovascular and Cardiopulmonary for 12 years.  I actually was a legal transcpiptionist for 17 years working full-time in a law office.  I switched to medical transcription after I gave birth to my second son, Chad, who was born with Down Syndrome and numerous medical anomolies requiring numerous surgeries.   Through all of this, I became very interested in medical transcription and applied for a job at our local hospital just on weekends doing medical transcription in the cardiopulmonary department. I had done an at home study for beginning medical transcriptionists only, but applied for the job because of many years experience as a transcriptionist in the legal profession.  They were desperata as they had been without any help on the weekends for 2 months.  They hired me right away and said &#8220;If you can do legal transcription, you can do medical.&#8221;  And with a great CMT who trained me on the job in-house, I quickly began full-time work and worked 10 years in-house learning so much; working morning, noon, night and all night if the need arose. I genuinely wanted to make a difference and was willing to meet the demands of an in-house MT in a 24/7 hospital. I decided to work as MT from home because of Chad graduating from high school and his desire to take some day classes at a Christian College which is 45 minutes away. I knew if I could provide transportation for him, he could have this desire of his heart. I could do this working as MT from home with my own hours.</p>
<p>The concern I have is that I am not a CMT and I am questioning at 59 years of age and loving my specialty of Cardiovascular/Cardipulmonary if I really should now become certified.  I can work pretty much 24/7 with the company I work for. I have since working from home done a course online in medical terminology which was very helpful.</p>
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