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Credentialing: - Association for Healthcare Documentation

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<strong>Credentialing</strong>:<br />

It’s About the “We,” Not the “Me”<br />

Recipe <strong>for</strong> Credential Success<br />

The “Secret Sauce”<br />

Continuing Education<br />

A Commitment to Lifelong Learning<br />

Harrisburg, PA<br />

Permit #1057<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

U.S. Postage Paid<br />

Where Health In<strong>for</strong>mation Experts Come Together<br />

NOVEMBER 2009 VOLUME 5, ISSUE 6<br />

EMPLOYERS GUIDE PAGE 43


EDITOR’S MESSAGE<br />

The <strong>Credentialing</strong> Dilemma:<br />

It’s About the “We,” Not the “Me”<br />

“Credentials are the concrete substance of credibility.”<br />

– T. Falcon Napier¹<br />

For as long as I have been a member/leader in AAMT<br />

and AHDI, I have heard many articulate and passionate<br />

debates about the value of professional credentials in<br />

our sector. It seems there is always a well-seasoned MT<br />

out there who is quick to jump on our Facebook page<br />

or our blog to complain about the lack of acknowledgement<br />

of credentials by our employers and purchasers.<br />

The vast majority of those posts focus on the fact that the<br />

MT hasn’t seen any personal benefit from earning these<br />

credentials, either by experience or observation.<br />

Sadly, many MTs are stuck in that “me” mindset<br />

about credentialing, believing that the only reason<br />

credentials exist is to earn them more money or recognition.<br />

Professional credentials exist first and <strong>for</strong>emost<br />

to establish and legitimize a profession, not to feather<br />

the cap of the individual. While advanced degrees and<br />

credentials can signify a greater value-add to an industry<br />

(and demand potentially higher wages once that value<br />

In healthcare delivery,<br />

professional credentials are king.<br />

is demonstrated in a widespread fashion), entry-level<br />

degrees and credentials are about building infrastructure<br />

in an industry and promoting standards that elevate the<br />

industry in the eyes of purchasers and stakeholders.<br />

In healthcare delivery, professional credentials are<br />

king. Everyone of significance on the healthcare team has<br />

a discrete body of knowledge, accountable scope of practice,<br />

regulatory and/or standards-setting representative<br />

organization, and professional credentials that speak to<br />

all of the above. Medical transcription as a questionable<br />

allied health partner continues to flounder in the periphery<br />

of acknowledgement because we collectively refuse<br />

to embrace that model of professional advancement <strong>for</strong><br />

our sector.<br />

In this issue we will look at these topics in greater<br />

detail, exploring the pros and cons, hows and whys of<br />

AHDI’s credentialing exams and what those credentials<br />

can do <strong>for</strong> our sector if we can move MTs from “me” to<br />

“us” in their approach to the subject. P<br />

Lea M. Sims, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

Editor-in-Chief<br />

Director of Communications & Publications<br />

AHDI<br />

reFerenCe<br />

1. Napier, T. Falcon. “Do You Lack Professional Credentials?”<br />

Article Alley. 28 March 2007. 8 September 2009. http://www.<br />

articlealley.com/article_141746_50.html<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

1


CONTENTS<br />

1 Editorial<br />

Lea M. Sims, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

7<br />

President’s Message<br />

Susan Lucci, RHIT, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

11<br />

Student Scene<br />

Cassie Uber<br />

24<br />

News and Who’s Who<br />

27<br />

Events<br />

28<br />

Grassroots<br />

Brenda J. Hurley, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

29<br />

Component Spotlight<br />

Sherry Martin, CMT<br />

32<br />

CMT Prep Quiz<br />

Deb Schreiber, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

1 clinical medicine<br />

33<br />

Component Corner<br />

34<br />

Let’s Talk Terms<br />

AHDI Research Team<br />

38<br />

Funny Bone<br />

Richard Lederer, PhD<br />

41<br />

2009 Article Index<br />

43<br />

Employers Guide<br />

FEATURES<br />

14<br />

REcipE FoR cREdEnTiAl SUccESS: ThE “SEcRET SAUcE”<br />

Tammy Moore, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

1 professional development<br />

18<br />

conTinUinG EdUcATion:<br />

A commiTmEnT To liFElonG lEARninG<br />

Kim Buchanan, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

1 professional development<br />

23<br />

2009 hAll oF FAmE SpoTliGhT<br />

novEMBER 2009 voL. 5, IssuE 6<br />

2 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


AHDI<br />

Capturing America’s<br />

<strong>Healthcare</strong> Story<br />

ThE FinE pRinT<br />

This symbol identifies creditworthy items preapproved by Ahdi. To earn cE credit,<br />

cmTs should submit a brief (200-word) summary of a preapproved article. Article<br />

summaries preapproved by Ahdi can be written and submitted at the end of your<br />

recertification cycle every 3 years. do not submit them upon completion. permission<br />

to reproduce copies of articles <strong>for</strong> educational use may be obtained from the editor at<br />

lsims@ahdionline.org.<br />

cmTs may opt to take the online quiz in lieu of an article summary <strong>for</strong> any article<br />

where this symbol is also indicated. You can find these cE quizzes at the Ahdi<br />

website under professional development/continuing Education/publications.<br />

look <strong>for</strong> this symbol throughout the magazine in 2009 to indicate tips and strategies<br />

<strong>for</strong> “going green.”<br />

The statements and opinions contained in the articles of Plexus are solely those of the<br />

individual authors and contributors and not Network Media Partners, Inc. The Publisher<br />

disclaims responsibility <strong>for</strong> any injury to persons or property resulting from any ideas or<br />

products referred to in the articles or advertisements.<br />

TO SUBMIT CONTENT FOR PUBLICATION: AHDI welcomes industry contributions, and<br />

all submissions <strong>for</strong> publication are welcome <strong>for</strong> review and consideration by the editor<br />

and the AHDI publications coordinator. Any individual or group interested in submitting<br />

an article or column content should follow the guidelines below <strong>for</strong> submission:<br />

1. Articles must be submitted in MS Word <strong>for</strong>mat, Arial 12 pt font, and should not<br />

exceed 4 single-spaced manuscript pages (some exceptions will be made depending<br />

on content).<br />

2. Articles should include full name and contact in<strong>for</strong>mation <strong>for</strong> each author/contributor<br />

as well as a brief bio (2-3 lines) <strong>for</strong> each author/contributor.<br />

3. Consider including a 15- to 20-question multiple-choice quiz with your article to<br />

facilitate online continuing education (CE) access <strong>for</strong> credentialed MTs.<br />

4. Articles must be submitted with a signed Author Agreement. An Author Agreement<br />

<strong>for</strong> both Plexus and Health Data Matrix can be requested from the publications coordinator<br />

at kwall@ahdionline.org.<br />

5. Articles should be e-mailed to lsims@ahdionline.org or mailed to<br />

6221 Devonhurst Drive, Jacksonville, FL 32258.<br />

6. Author Agreements should be signed and faxed to 209-527-9633 or mailed to the<br />

address above.<br />

NOTE TO REAdERS: In keeping with other publications in the industry, Plexus has<br />

been edited to comply with the style and standards as outlined by the American Medical<br />

<strong>Association</strong> (AMA) Manual of Style, 10th ed. In any instance where the application of<br />

AMA style conflicts with The Book of Style <strong>for</strong> Medical Transcription, 3rd edition, the AMA<br />

standard is used to comply with industry publishing standards, because those outlined<br />

in The Book of Style <strong>for</strong> Medical Transcription, 3rd edition are specific to documentation in a<br />

transcription setting and not to <strong>for</strong>mal publication.<br />

4 novEMBER 2009<br />

november 2009<br />

Vol. 5, no. 6<br />

editor<br />

lea m. Sims, cmT, Ahdi-F<br />

lsims@ahdionline.org<br />

AssociAte editors<br />

connie chaplan, mpA<br />

RuthAnne m. darr, cmT, Ahdi-F<br />

debra hahn<br />

senior PublicAtions coordinAtor<br />

Kristin Wall, Ahdi-F<br />

kwall@ahdionline.org<br />

desiGn<br />

network design Group<br />

Jen Smith, Art director<br />

jsmith@networkmediapartners.com<br />

Austin Stahl, Graphic designer<br />

AdvertisinG<br />

Jeff Rhodes, Sales manager<br />

network media partners, inc.<br />

410-584-1952<br />

ahdi@networkmediapartners.com<br />

megan craw<strong>for</strong>d, Advertising coordinator<br />

Plexus (ISSN: 1938-453x)<br />

is published bi-monthly by the<br />

<strong>Association</strong> <strong>for</strong> healthcare<br />

documentation integrity<br />

4230 Kiernan Ave., Suite 130<br />

Modesto, CA 95356-9322<br />

custom PublisHinG<br />

services Provided by<br />

network media partners, inc. and<br />

network design Group, The creative<br />

Group of network media partners, inc.<br />

Executive Plaza 1, Suite 900<br />

11350 McCormick Road<br />

Hunt Valley, MD 21031<br />

coPyriGHt notice<br />

Plexus is published six times a year<br />

by the <strong>Association</strong> <strong>for</strong> healthcare<br />

documentation integrity,<br />

4230 Kiernan Ave., Suite 130<br />

modesto, cA 95356-9322<br />

All contents ©2008 <strong>Association</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />

healthcare documentation integrity<br />

PostmAster<br />

Send address changes to:<br />

Plexus<br />

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modesto, cA 95356-9322


The Book You<br />

Reach <strong>for</strong> Most<br />

The Book of Style <strong>for</strong> Medical<br />

Transcription, 3rd edition.<br />

For coated:<br />

Blue: 534<br />

Green: 382<br />

For uncoated:<br />

Blue: 547<br />

Green: 380<br />

Chapter Chapter 1: 1: Types, Types, Formats, Formats, and and TATs TATs<br />

This widely acclaimed industry standards manual has long been the trusted resource <strong>for</strong><br />

data capture and documentation standards in healthcare. The 3rd edition will deliver<br />

a streamlined and strategically reorganized flow of critical data, enhanced<br />

explanation of standards and practical application, robust examples<br />

taken from clinical medicine settings, trend notes that identify<br />

the impact of technology on the state of the industry, and<br />

new chapters on security/privacy, standardized templates<br />

and nomenclatures, the electronic health record, and<br />

speech recognition editing.<br />

The BOS 3rd edition is now<br />

available <strong>for</strong> purchase.<br />

New pricing <strong>for</strong> 3rd edition:<br />

$50 members, $70 nonmembers.<br />

Visit us online<br />

(www.ahdionline.org)<br />

<strong>for</strong> ordering in<strong>for</strong>mation.


PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE<br />

The Long and Winding Road<br />

SUSAN LUCCI, RHIT, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

2009 AHDI PRESIDENT<br />

Is it even possible that 2009 is nearly over? It seems like<br />

it just started a very short time ago. This has certainly<br />

been an eventful year <strong>for</strong> us all. The closer we get to<br />

healthcare re<strong>for</strong>m, the more the debate heats up and resolution<br />

seems a long way off. However, I have no doubt<br />

that we will re<strong>for</strong>m health care. The discussions around<br />

quality patient care and improved patient outcomes<br />

make me smile because these are the right conversations<br />

<strong>for</strong> us to be having.<br />

So at nearly the end of the year, what core values have<br />

prevailed <strong>for</strong> our association’s members? What are the key<br />

focus areas that keep all that we contribute to health care<br />

visible and less likely to create further marginalization <strong>for</strong><br />

us? Below is my Top-10 list why it is more important than<br />

ever to become fully engaged in AHDI:<br />

1. Getting our work<strong>for</strong>ce credentialed<br />

2. Having better tools to help us improve accuracy,<br />

quality, and to keep us productive (such as with<br />

Benchmark KB)<br />

3. Developing new quality standards <strong>for</strong> our entire<br />

sector<br />

4. Advocating <strong>for</strong> legislation that ensures quality and<br />

complete documentation <strong>for</strong> every patient<br />

5. Enabling technologies like the Health Story Project<br />

that keeps the “narrative imperative”<br />

6. Providing continuing education and networking with<br />

other professionals in the business<br />

7. Staking our claim to new job roles be<strong>for</strong>e they evolve<br />

and get assigned to other allied health professionals<br />

8. Keeping innovative approaches to the association so<br />

that there really is something <strong>for</strong> everyone<br />

9. Connecting on Facebook as an alternate, fun way to<br />

stay in touch with fellow MTs and stay up to date on<br />

AHDI in<strong>for</strong>mation<br />

10. Twittering about what is happening at every event<br />

Getting credentialed and staying credentialed is more<br />

important than ever be<strong>for</strong>e. As work migrates to EHR<br />

and templated systems <strong>for</strong> clinician self-entry, we are see-<br />

ing a contracture of work volumes. In times of economic<br />

downturn, you must set yourself apart from the competition<br />

<strong>for</strong> your job and demonstrate your commitment to<br />

life-long learning. There are no other members of the<br />

healthcare delivery team who aren’t required to hold a<br />

credential or licensure. Getting credentialed is competency-based<br />

testing that clearly says, “I am a professional,<br />

and I am committed to excellence.”<br />

Benchmark KB, our 2009 Innovation Through<br />

Technology award-winning product, has provided medical<br />

transcriptionists (MTs) a resource that has never<br />

be<strong>for</strong>e been conceived in a powerful and proven way by<br />

There are no other members of the healthcare<br />

delivery team who aren’t required to hold a credential<br />

or licensure.<br />

combining tools that are reliable, trustworthy, and available<br />

24/7, with ongoing updates. Is it any wonder that<br />

people are raving about the results and success they are<br />

achieving with this product?<br />

How quality is measured has always been a bit<br />

nebulous. What really matters regarding quality and<br />

the garden variety of plans and programs out there have<br />

been the Heinz ® 57 confusion factor <strong>for</strong> hospitals and<br />

consumers <strong>for</strong> far too long. This year our association,<br />

in collaboration with AHIMA and MTIA, embarked on<br />

a brave journey to bring reason and consistency to the<br />

process by defi ning clear principles with a group of participants<br />

from various backgrounds in health care to gain<br />

the broadest scope of how best to defi ne quality.<br />

Advocacy in the volatile world of rapid legislative<br />

change in Washington, DC, is crucial. We must be represented<br />

in terms of the value that we bring to healthcare<br />

re<strong>for</strong>m. Simply stated, we must convince decision-makers<br />

voLUME 5 • ISSUE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

7


PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE<br />

that health care without quality documentation cannot<br />

result in the best outcomes. Our presence and our interest<br />

in patient safety and improved care outcomes will<br />

resonate with lawmakers—and now with more scrutiny<br />

placed on patient privacy and breach notification, this is<br />

paramount. We are the ones who have been safeguarding<br />

patient in<strong>for</strong>mation <strong>for</strong> all these years. We must continue<br />

to advocate <strong>for</strong> these issues, and we must have a<br />

larger, louder voice each year in DC. I encourage you to<br />

get involved with the legislative issues group today. One<br />

person can make a difference.<br />

Possibly the single most important technology<br />

innovation today in the delivery of healthcare documentation<br />

is the Health Story Project (www.healthstory.com).<br />

What this does to standard dictation and transcription<br />

is nothing short of the “wow” factor. This is the key that<br />

will unlock narrative text into the EHR in a minable,<br />

structured manner. When physicians have the option<br />

to continue to dictate (since it is their preferred method<br />

<strong>for</strong> documentation) and do not have to resort to selfentry<br />

methods, they can remain productive. Physicians<br />

are being pressed to see more patients and to do more<br />

than they have ever done be<strong>for</strong>e (think about healthcare<br />

re<strong>for</strong>m and millions more people seeking treatment and<br />

care). Now consider that it is predicted that there will<br />

be a shortage of about 200,000¹ primary care physicians<br />

occurring in less than 11 years (2020-2025). Then<br />

try to conceptualize the impact to physicians if they<br />

are not enabled to get the whole story documented in<br />

the fastest possible way. Do you see the potential train<br />

wreck if we have a solution that enables dictation and<br />

Our interest in patient safety and improved care<br />

outcomes will resonate with lawmakers.<br />

transcription to continue to be the preferred, fastest,<br />

most complete method of capturing the entire, unique<br />

situation of each patient?<br />

In changing times, and most particularly in a time of<br />

rapid technology changes, not to mention the economic<br />

downturn, being connected with other professionals in<br />

our sector is critical! Working remotely is more isolation<br />

than most onsite professional workers experience<br />

in their entire careers. For many of us, we have been<br />

working from home <strong>for</strong> twenty or more years. This<br />

isolation can take a tremendous toll over the course<br />

of years, and most dangerously, we can settle into a<br />

false state of complacency and not see the storm that is<br />

brewing. When there is a storm coming, it’s not a time<br />

<strong>for</strong> panic—it’s a time <strong>for</strong> preparation, more educational<br />

opportunities to be sure that you are looking ahead, and<br />

making the right adjustments to sail safely through the<br />

<strong>for</strong>ces of change.<br />

When times are changing—as they are now with<br />

emerging and dominating technologies like the EHR—<br />

work flow and work processes naturally change with<br />

them. As allied health professionals figure out how best<br />

to work with these technologies, it is necessary <strong>for</strong> us<br />

to stake our claim <strong>for</strong> the new roles as they are being<br />

conceptualized. AHIMA has consistently done this very<br />

successfully.² Unless we can align our skills and expertise<br />

in new job roles, these issues about the unknown work<br />

processes may be solved without our input. It is critical<br />

that we learn all we can about these systems and then<br />

apply our experience and clinical knowledge to fill these<br />

evolving roles. Knowledge really is everything.<br />

One of the most important opportunities a professional<br />

association provides is the collective ability to<br />

look <strong>for</strong> new ways of doing what we do and to connect<br />

with relevant processes and initiatives. Challenging<br />

the status quo and not blindly doing what we have<br />

always done is what will keep an association fresh and<br />

progressive.<br />

Most of us have started to use online social networking<br />

sites, like Facebook, and we realize the amazing<br />

potential they can bring in connecting people. We have<br />

been able to reach people in a whole new way, and so<br />

through this technology we have connected with people<br />

who share our profession. Using Twitter has given instant<br />

connectivity to our events, and although there are times<br />

when I am not sure whether I am tweeting or if Twitter<br />

means I am a twit (LOL), I love the opportunity to share<br />

what’s happening in the moment. I even Twitter from my<br />

cell phone. How cool is that?<br />

Can you see that the Top-10 List <strong>for</strong> getting and staying<br />

involved with AHDI makes a world of sense when<br />

the world around us doesn’t seem to make a lot of sense?<br />

It is going to be interesting to see where healthcare<br />

re<strong>for</strong>m ends up—as <strong>for</strong> me, I am here <strong>for</strong> the duration.<br />

If we can all envision how much better health care is by<br />

including our knowledge and expertise, we really are the<br />

essential element that will make the US healthcare system<br />

the very best in the world. It is a long and winding<br />

road that will be made far more interesting if we actively<br />

8 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


When there is a storm coming, it’s not a time<br />

<strong>for</strong> panic—it’s a time <strong>for</strong> preparation.<br />

work to shape it into an amazing journey.<br />

As my year of presidency comes to an end, it is<br />

with heartfelt gratitude that I thank all of you <strong>for</strong> your<br />

support, your encouragement, and your friendship in<br />

making this the most amazing year of my life. Let’s keep<br />

moving <strong>for</strong>ward together—one voice, one goal, one<br />

amazing organization! P<br />

REFERENCES<br />

1. Lakhan, Shaheen E, and Laird, Cyndi. “Addressing the<br />

Primary Care Physician Shortage in an Evolving Medical<br />

Work<strong>for</strong>ce.” 5 May 2009. International Archives of Medicine.<br />

25 Aug. 2009. <br />

2. Dimick, Chris. “HIM Jobs of Tomorrow.” 1 Oct. 2008. Journal<br />

of AHIMA. 25 Aug. 2009. <br />

Susan Lucci, RHIT, CMT, AHDI-F, is the 2009 President of AHDI.<br />

Susan works <strong>for</strong> Webmedx as Senior Vice President, Field Operations.<br />

Susan is an active Action Community <strong>for</strong> e-HIM Excellence member<br />

with AHIMA and a frequent contributor to publications such as Plexus,<br />

Matrix, For the Record and ADVANCE <strong>for</strong> HIM. She can be reached<br />

at slucci@webmedx.com.<br />

voLUME 5 • ISSUE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

9


STUDENT SCENE<br />

Attention Students of<br />

ACCP-Approved Schools:<br />

RMT Success Awaits!<br />

CAssie UBer<br />

In late 2008, AHDI’s <strong>Credentialing</strong>,<br />

Education, and Work<strong>for</strong>ce<br />

Development department per<strong>for</strong>med<br />

an in<strong>for</strong>mal data survey of credentialing<br />

exam pass rates. The purpose<br />

of this collection of data was to<br />

record a current pass rate <strong>for</strong> the<br />

Registered Medical Transcriptionist<br />

(RMT) and Certifi ed Medical<br />

Transcriptionist (CMT) exams. While<br />

cataloging instances of passes and<br />

fails on the RMT exam, the team<br />

reported on additional data that<br />

is collected during the application<br />

process. During the RMT application<br />

process, a candidate completes<br />

a small survey of demographic<br />

in<strong>for</strong>mation including an indication<br />

of what school from which he or<br />

she graduated. With such a bounty<br />

of in<strong>for</strong>mation, our team decided<br />

to look not only at pass rates <strong>for</strong><br />

the RMT exam, but at the instance<br />

in passing of students of ACCP-<br />

Approved Schools, and conversely,<br />

the instance in passing of students<br />

of non-approved schools. What<br />

we found is that not only does the<br />

probability of passing the RMT exam<br />

increase in exam candidates who<br />

graduated from approved schools<br />

but that the pass rate as compared<br />

to that of graduates of non-approved<br />

schools is far greater than even we<br />

expected.<br />

During our data survey of the<br />

RMT and CMT exams, AHDI went<br />

through 240 RMT candidate applications<br />

that had been submitted<br />

from the beginning of 2007 through<br />

August of 2008. AHDI found that<br />

the RMT exam had an overall pass<br />

rate of 51% (an indication of a valid<br />

entry-level exam, according to the<br />

psychometricians we work with at<br />

our testing center). When narrowed<br />

by educational entity attended, we<br />

found that students of approved<br />

schools passed the RMT exam<br />

about 70% of the time. Staggeringly,<br />

we found that students of nonapproved<br />

schools passed the RMT<br />

only about 33% of the time. While<br />

the <strong>Credentialing</strong>, Education, and<br />

Work<strong>for</strong>ce Development department<br />

expected to record a comparative<br />

disparity in those numbers, we were<br />

astounded at how large of a gap of<br />

success there actually was and we<br />

began to ponder why.<br />

The Registered Medical<br />

Transcriptionist (RMT) exam was created<br />

to provide employers with the<br />

assurance that successful candidates<br />

were qualifi ed to practice medical<br />

transcription. The RMT exam is<br />

geared toward people who have graduated<br />

from a medical transcription<br />

course and have less than two years<br />

of acute care experience, or transcriptionists<br />

who have practiced solely in<br />

limited specialty settings and do not<br />

voLUME 5 • ISSUE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

11


STUDENT SCENE<br />

have two years of acute care experience.<br />

Successful completion of the<br />

RMT exam requires mastery of the<br />

introductory skills that are outlined<br />

in the AHDI Model Curriculum—the<br />

required curriculum of every ACCP<br />

approved school.<br />

The need <strong>for</strong> a model curriculum<br />

in medical transcription was<br />

recognized early on in the <strong>for</strong>mation<br />

of AAMT (now AHDI) in 1978. At<br />

that time, <strong>for</strong>mal education programs<br />

in this profession were rare,<br />

and schools that wanted to pioneer<br />

in teaching this field were on their<br />

own in deciding how best to meet<br />

those needs.<br />

The birth of today’s model curriculum<br />

started with the creation<br />

of a collection of competencies<br />

needed by an entry-level transcriptionist,<br />

published in 1988 as<br />

the Competency Profile <strong>for</strong> MT<br />

Education Programs (COMPRO).<br />

The Model Curriculum evolved<br />

from that in an ef<strong>for</strong>t to guide medical<br />

transcription educational entities<br />

in successfully producing MTs<br />

whose experience met this profile.<br />

It has been revised four times (most<br />

recently in 2008), and always with<br />

the help of a consortia of educators<br />

and transcription professionals.<br />

The Model Curriculum serves as a<br />

set of guidelines that AHDI suggest<br />

medical transcription courses follow<br />

in order to develop in students<br />

the skills and aptitudes necessary<br />

to succeed as a practicing medical<br />

transcriptionist. With such precise<br />

and prestigious competencies<br />

met, it is no wonder that graduates<br />

of approved schools successfully<br />

complete the RMT exam at a greater<br />

instance than graduates of nonapproved<br />

schools!<br />

The Model Curriculum <strong>for</strong><br />

Medical Transcription focuses on<br />

five key content areas: English<br />

Language, Medical Knowledge,<br />

It is no wonder that graduates of approved schools<br />

successfully complete the RMT exam at a greater instance than graduates of<br />

non-approved schools!<br />

Technology, Medicolegal Aspects of<br />

the <strong>Healthcare</strong> Record, and Medical<br />

Transcription Practice. If you were<br />

to look at the blueprint <strong>for</strong> the RMT<br />

exam, you would find that it mimics<br />

the Model Curriculum in these same<br />

content areas.<br />

So, with students of approved<br />

schools showing such a higher<br />

instance of success on the RMT<br />

exam, does that mean that as a<br />

student of a non-approved school<br />

all is lost? Absolutely not! There<br />

are hundreds of training programs<br />

in the market today, with only a<br />

handful currently represented on the<br />

AHDI-approved list. To find out if<br />

your school stands up to the Model<br />

Curriculum, and <strong>for</strong> more in<strong>for</strong>mation<br />

on the ACCP Approval Process,<br />

A&H Training<br />

The Andrews School<br />

Career Step<br />

Central Texas Community College<br />

Columbia State Community College<br />

Everett Community College<br />

Exact-Med<br />

Lakeshore Technical College<br />

M-TEC<br />

Med-Line School of MT<br />

go to http://www.ahdionline.org/<br />

tabid/210/Default.aspx.<br />

Regardless of your training<br />

program, there are exam prep and<br />

assessment courses available to help<br />

you get ready <strong>for</strong> the RMT Exam.<br />

Visit the AHDI website or send us an<br />

email <strong>for</strong> help in finding a program<br />

that will work <strong>for</strong> you. If your school<br />

would like to work with us on ACCP<br />

Program Approval and increasing<br />

their graduates’ success on the RMT<br />

exam, have them contact Cassie Uber<br />

at cuber@ahdionline.org. P<br />

Cassie Uber is the credentialing and education<br />

coordinator <strong>for</strong> AHDI.<br />

Approved MediCAl TrAnsCripTion edUCATion progrAMs<br />

Is my school approved by the Approval Committee <strong>for</strong> Certificate Programs<br />

(ACCP)? Schools currently approved by the ACCP include:<br />

To find out more about these schools, visit:<br />

http://www.ahdionline.org/tabid/251/Default.aspx<br />

Metropolitan Community College<br />

MSU-Bottineau<br />

Richland Community College<br />

Roane State Community College<br />

Sheridan Technical Center<br />

Seminole Community College<br />

TRSi<br />

TranzMed<br />

Winter Park Tech<br />

12 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


CERTIFICATION<br />

While transcriptionists do not provide<br />

hands-on patient care, they are<br />

part of a critical process to create an<br />

accurate record of that care and play<br />

a vital role in risk management on<br />

the allied healthcare team. The application<br />

of in<strong>for</strong>med judgment based<br />

on clinical knowledge and understanding<br />

of the diagnostic process<br />

will continue to be part of the evolv-<br />

ing role of complex narrative in the<br />

EHR. A credentialed work<strong>for</strong>ce, it<br />

has been argued, may be the solution<br />

to better positioning the transcription<br />

sector <strong>for</strong> greater visibility and<br />

credibility in a healthcare system that<br />

highly values professional training,<br />

credentialing, and a defined scope of<br />

practice. ➤<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

13


1 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT<br />

Recipe <strong>for</strong><br />

Credential<br />

Success<br />

The “Secret Sauce”<br />

TAMMY MOORE, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

14 noVemBeR 2009 WWW.AHDIonlIne.oRG


How do you select a mechanic when your car breaks<br />

down? Do you scan the yellow pages and hope<br />

that the one you select is skilled and reputable?<br />

Sometimes people do that because they do not have a<br />

choice, but most of the time people ask <strong>for</strong> recommendations<br />

from friends and coworkers so that they find a<br />

mechanic with a good reputation. They might even go a<br />

step further to see if the mechanic is certified, licensed,<br />

and/or bonded be<strong>for</strong>e they take their vehicle in <strong>for</strong> repair.<br />

What do people do when they need to find a new doctor?<br />

What do people look <strong>for</strong> in a physician? Again, they<br />

usually ask around to find someone who is skilled and<br />

caring. If they are looking <strong>for</strong> a specialist, they will likely<br />

check to make sure he or she is credentialed in their<br />

specialty.<br />

What is a credential? There are a few variations on<br />

the definition of credential. Basically, it is a document<br />

1<br />

The first ingredient is YOU! You have<br />

made the decision to earn your credential,<br />

and now you need to gather some<br />

other ingredients.<br />

Candidate Guide. Get a copy of the<br />

Candidate Guide, either Registered<br />

2 Medical Transcriptionist (RMT) or<br />

Certified Medical Transcriptionist<br />

(CMT), from the AHDI website (www.<br />

ahdionline.org). Read the recommendations regarding<br />

each credential. Be very honest with yourself about your<br />

experience, skills, and abilities as you read the eligibility<br />

and requirements. It is fine to set your sights on the CMT<br />

credential, but you are only setting yourself up <strong>for</strong> disappointment<br />

if you truly do not have enough experience to<br />

tackle the CMT exam. Work on your RMT first and then<br />

garner the recommended experience be<strong>for</strong>e you press on<br />

toward your CMT goal.<br />

or testimony that indicates someone is highly skilled<br />

and knowledgeable in his or her chosen career. It gives<br />

people credit or authority in their knowledge area.<br />

With all the changes in healthcare legislation and<br />

concerns about identity theft, people will begin to make<br />

more in<strong>for</strong>med inquiries about their protected health<br />

in<strong>for</strong>mation (PHI). They will want to know who is handling<br />

their PHI and if that person is skilled and reputable.<br />

People will feel more secure when they hear that<br />

a highly skilled and credentialed healthcare documentation<br />

specialist (medical transcriptionist) handled their<br />

protected health in<strong>for</strong>mation.<br />

Whenever you make the decision to obtain your<br />

credential, it is likely that your next question will be,<br />

“Where do I start?” Here is a recipe to help you get from<br />

your decision to your credentialing goal.<br />

Study method. You need to decide on<br />

a study method and timeline. Study<br />

3 groups work very well, so see if some<br />

of your coworkers are interested in<br />

becoming credentialed, too. If there is<br />

a credentialed person where you work, see if they would<br />

be willing to help you <strong>for</strong>m a study group, maybe even<br />

lead the group. It is always nice to have someone who<br />

can share his or her exam experience so you are not facing<br />

a huge unknown.<br />

Study groups also have a couple nice built-in advantages.<br />

One is that it helps hold you to a study timeline.<br />

It is more of a challenge to allow life to interfere when<br />

people expect you to come prepared to a study meeting.<br />

Study groups also bring a variety of experiences from<br />

which a group could benefit. If you have someone who<br />

has strong experience in internal medicine, that person<br />

could share their expertise with everyone, and so can<br />

the person who loves orthopedics. The likely favorite<br />

study group participant will be the person who excels in<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

15


Recipe <strong>for</strong> Credential Success<br />

English and grammar (a subject many people simply love<br />

to hate).<br />

Be sure to check out the reference list in the<br />

Candidate Guide. Select a few items <strong>for</strong> your study<br />

group. You may be able to locate them in a local library.<br />

Another good resource is the CMT Review Guide or RMT<br />

Review Guide. They are wonderful foundations <strong>for</strong> study<br />

groups, but they are not stand-alone study references.<br />

You will need to use other study materials also.<br />

4<br />

Plan your study path. Pick up the<br />

Candidate Guide again and look at the<br />

appendix. This is where the exam content<br />

outline is located. This is the meat<br />

and potatoes <strong>for</strong> your study group, the<br />

key credential ingredients.<br />

It does not matter which credential you are working<br />

toward, you must have all the basics nailed down—prefi<br />

xes, suffi xes, root words, etc. When you begin studying<br />

these items, even if you have been transcribing <strong>for</strong> eons,<br />

do not be surprised if many little details have slipped<br />

away from you over the years.<br />

English grammar and punctuation are important<br />

ingredients <strong>for</strong> both the RMT and CMT exams, so<br />

defi nitely spend time on them. Some people have a<br />

tendency to skip over this<br />

area, but that is not a good<br />

idea. This is a situation<br />

Textbooks, study<br />

guides, and meetings<br />

cannot compete with<br />

people sharing their<br />

experience with each<br />

other. It is simply<br />

priceless!<br />

where you may have been<br />

doing something a particular<br />

way <strong>for</strong> years, but the<br />

trick is, can you answer<br />

a question about why<br />

you do it that way? Many<br />

people <strong>for</strong>get about conjunctions,<br />

prepositional<br />

phrases, compound/complex<br />

sentences, etc. Do<br />

not panic. It really is all<br />

about reviewing English<br />

language and clearing out<br />

those cobwebs. If you have<br />

an old textbook sitting<br />

on a bookshelf collecting<br />

dust, it will serve your study purposes well. If you do<br />

not, then hit the local library or the Internet. A good<br />

grade level text to search <strong>for</strong> is something in the 8th to<br />

9th grade range. Those grade levels do a good job covering<br />

English grammar and punctuation, and are usually<br />

in a style and <strong>for</strong>mat that is simple to follow. There are<br />

wonderful websites available where people who love this<br />

subject are more than willing to share their knowledge<br />

with everyone.<br />

It is important to study anatomy and physiology.<br />

Do not skip over the basics here, either. There are likely<br />

to be more cobwebs to dust, so you can recall the cell<br />

structure and function in<strong>for</strong>mation from school. Break<br />

this area into logical segments that make good pairings,<br />

such as cardiology and pulmonology, podiatry and orthopedics,<br />

plastic surgery and dermatology, etc. If you set up<br />

your studies so one item fl ows into the next, it will not<br />

be as overwhelming. As you work through anatomy and<br />

physiology, be a multi-tasker in a positive way. Include<br />

the disease processes that occur in each system with your<br />

system study or review.<br />

This is the point in your studies where you can<br />

refi ne your study process. Do you consider yourself an<br />

expert in a particular area (ie, you have been transcribing<br />

orthopedic reports at a teaching facility <strong>for</strong> 15+ years)?<br />

If so, then you probably will not need to spend much<br />

time studying that material. However, if you are in a<br />

study group, be sure to share your expertise in that area<br />

with your fellow study group members. Share your tips<br />

and hints on how to remember tricky terms, equipment<br />

names, etc. Study groups often take on a life of their own<br />

as people begin freely sharing their knowledge and experience.<br />

Textbooks, study guides, and meetings cannot<br />

compete with people sharing their experience with each<br />

other. It is simply priceless!<br />

As you move through all the body systems and<br />

disease processes, review, review, review. If you notice<br />

items that you struggled with in one area, add it to your<br />

review <strong>for</strong> the next session. You will also notice that<br />

items from one section are naturally going to appear<br />

in another section. For instance, orthopedic medicine<br />

terms are going to reappear in emergency medicine;<br />

hematology/oncology terms are going to reappear in<br />

internal medicine, etc. There<strong>for</strong>e, between your scheduled<br />

review material and studying new body systems,<br />

you are getting lots of good review.<br />

HIPAA and medicolegal issues. Make sure you do not<br />

leave out this ingredient. It is a very important subject.<br />

Many people consider it so important that they fi nd it<br />

helpful to cover this subject at the beginning of their<br />

study groups along with the prefi xes, suffi xes, etc, and<br />

then review, review, review.<br />

16 noVemBeR 2009 WWW.AHDIonlIne.oRG


Another key ingredient is FUN! Yes,<br />

make studying fun. There is nothing<br />

5 worse than dry, boring textbook studying.<br />

Think outside the box and pull in<br />

as much fun as you can. If you are in a<br />

study group, chances are there are a couple people who<br />

like crosswords and word-fi nd puzzles. Turn them loose<br />

on different subjects and challenge them to stump the<br />

group. Consider using good old-fashioned fl ash cards.<br />

Those are tried and true study aids (especially with prefi<br />

xes, suffi xes, glands, cranial nerves, etc) and work well<br />

with any set of items that need repetition to gain familiarity.<br />

Use index cards to make yourself a set of fl ashcards<br />

and toss them in your purse or briefcase so that you have<br />

them handy when you are waiting to pick the kids up<br />

from school, sitting in the doctor’s offi ce, etc. You will<br />

get in some good study time in those otherwise wasted<br />

moments. Are you meeting face-to-face with a group?<br />

How about a game or two of hangman to work on spelling<br />

tough words? How about a “stump-my-study-buddy<br />

day”? Set aside a day to call someone in your group and<br />

try to stump them with a study question or two. It helps<br />

keep people on their toes if they never know when that<br />

“stumper” call will come, and it is extra motivation to<br />

keep everyone on track with their studies. The only thing<br />

that limits your fun study activities is your imagination.<br />

Turn it loose and let it fl y free!<br />

Are you studying alone? If a study group is something<br />

that is not feasible due to your location or<br />

situation, ask a friend to be your study buddy or<br />

accountability partner. They do not necessarily have<br />

to be someone in the medical fi eld, simply someone<br />

who will commit to check in on you and help keep<br />

you on track with your goal. If they are willing to toss<br />

study questions at you periodically, that is a big plus.<br />

Having someone to hold you accountable is important.<br />

It is a challenge to stay on task with studying without<br />

some sort of accountability because the majority<br />

of us will let “life” happen to us, and be<strong>for</strong>e we know<br />

it, our good intentions are in the past and our goal is<br />

almost unattainable. Do not let that happen to you!<br />

Do not think that you cannot take advantage of working<br />

fun into your studies. You can also take advantage<br />

of using games and puzzles in your studies. There are<br />

websites that have fl ashcards, hangman games, puzzles,<br />

etc, which you can use. There is software available so<br />

you can build your own crossword puzzles. If you are<br />

thinking to yourself that you cannot possibly build a<br />

crossword puzzle because it is too diffi cult, you will be<br />

surprised how easy it is to create a puzzle. There are<br />

some very user friendly pieces of software out there.<br />

There is at least one free crossword puzzle maker available<br />

(www.eclipsecrossword.com). It is as simple as making<br />

a vocabulary list, adding the defi nitions, and letting<br />

the software create the puzzle. You enter your words<br />

and defi nitions and then the software juggles things<br />

around <strong>for</strong> you. Presto, you have a puzzle. PLUS, you<br />

had a chance to review your vocabulary words while<br />

you built yourself some fun!<br />

Last ingredient, schedule your exam. No<br />

matter how long you set your study<br />

6 schedule <strong>for</strong>, be sure to schedule your<br />

exam as close to the end of your studies<br />

as possible.<br />

People see the best<br />

results from their studies<br />

by taking their credential<br />

exam within two to four The only thing that<br />

weeks from the end of<br />

their study sessions.<br />

limits your fun<br />

study activities is<br />

As with all recipes, there is<br />

always room <strong>for</strong> improvising<br />

and making the recipe your imagination.<br />

to your own taste. Tweak<br />

things along the way, get Turn it loose and<br />

creative, and spice things<br />

up! If you have not fi gured let it fl y free!<br />

it out yet, the key secret<br />

ingredient in the secret<br />

sauce is YOU and your goal to become credentialed.<br />

Stay on target and keep reaching <strong>for</strong> that goal. You can<br />

do it! P<br />

Tammy Moore, CMT, AHDI-F, is the QA manager and education<br />

coordinator at Webmedx as well as an instructor at M-TEC (an ACCPapproved<br />

distance-learning program in Ohio). She was a contributor <strong>for</strong><br />

the RMT Review Guide and has participated as a review board member<br />

<strong>for</strong> various Stedman’s skill builder books and references. Tammy has<br />

20+ years’ experience in the healthcare documentation fi eld. She is an<br />

active member of AHDI, serving on various committees and teams. She<br />

can be reached at tdmoore005@gmail.com.<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

17


1 PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT<br />

Continuing<br />

Education<br />

A Commitment to Lifelong Learning<br />

KIM BuChANAN, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

18 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


Professional credentials like the RMT and CMT illustrate<br />

to the industry that you meet benchmark standards<br />

of excellence. They also show your commitment<br />

to lifelong learning and professional development.<br />

Earning the credential is only the fi rst step. Once you<br />

have proven your abilities by passing either the RMT or<br />

the CMT exam, you enter into a three-year cycle of continuing<br />

education. The process differs slightly between<br />

the entry-level RMT and the expert-level CMT, but the<br />

intent is the same: to assure the public and the industry<br />

that you are qualifi ed to practice in your fi eld.<br />

CERTIFIED MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST (CMT)<br />

The <strong>Association</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Healthcare</strong> <strong>Documentation</strong> Integrity<br />

(AHDI) has been offering the CMT credential since the<br />

early 1980s. AHDI endorses this credential in order to<br />

protect the public interest by promoting high professional<br />

and ethical standards, improve the practice of<br />

medical transcription, and recognize those professionals<br />

who demonstrate their competency in medical transcription<br />

through the fulfi llment of requirements as outlined<br />

in the AHDI Model Job Description <strong>for</strong> Level 2 MTs.<br />

These individuals have a depth and breadth of knowledge<br />

that spans across medical specialties and document<br />

types. They are often assisting others in research and<br />

quality control. Because of the rapidly changing world of<br />

medicine, it is vital that CMTs maintain almost constant<br />

continuing education. The minimum requirement is to<br />

earn a total of 30 continuing education credits (CECs)<br />

every three years; however, many CMTs submit hundreds<br />

of CECs at the end of their cycle.<br />

CREDIT-WORThY ACTIvITIES<br />

Continuing education credits may be earned by participating<br />

in credit-worthy activities relevant to medical<br />

transcription. An activity is defi ned as a single presentation,<br />

lecture, educational course, workshop on a single<br />

topic, an approved quiz or puzzle, and article summary.<br />

Live activities such as lectures, workshops, seminars, and<br />

symposia may be approved <strong>for</strong> CE credit based on contact<br />

hours, rounded down to the nearest quarter hour.<br />

No credit is given <strong>for</strong> activities of less than 15 minutes<br />

in length; unrelated activities of less than 15 minutes<br />

aHdi strives to provide ample continuing<br />

education opportunities <strong>for</strong> CMTs throughout the<br />

year and across a variety of mediums.<br />

cannot be combined to meet the minimum 15-minute<br />

requirement. All activities are evaluated individually <strong>for</strong><br />

creditworthiness. A written summary of a credit-worthy<br />

activity earns only one CEC regardless of the length of<br />

the original activity.<br />

AHDI strives to provide ample continuing education<br />

opportunities <strong>for</strong> CMTs throughout the year and across<br />

a variety of mediums. The Annual Conference and Expo<br />

(ACE), typically held the fi rst week of August each year,<br />

provides more than 30 different credit-worthy sessions<br />

to choose from. Regional meetings, monthly online<br />

webinars, and credit-worthy articles in Plexus and Health<br />

Data Matrix are other convenient ways to earn CECs.<br />

AHDI also offers a variety of credit-worthy products in<br />

the online store. Visit the AHDI website and download<br />

a copy of the <strong>Credentialing</strong> Product Catalog under the<br />

Education/Training tab, followed by Credentials and<br />

Designations.<br />

CMTs AND CECs<br />

There are four core areas of focus <strong>for</strong> CMTs earning<br />

continuing education. A minimum of eight credits must<br />

voLuME 5 • IssuE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

19


Continuing EduCation<br />

A Commitment to Lifelong Learning<br />

be earned in the category of Clinical Medicine, four in<br />

the Medical Transcription Tools category, six that pertain<br />

to Technology and the Workplace, and six under the<br />

umbrella of Medicolegal Issues. This leaves an additional<br />

six required credits, which can come from any of the<br />

four core areas or the optional areas of Complementary<br />

Medicine and Professional Development. The goal is to<br />

receive well-rounded continuing education in order to<br />

remain relevant in your job as a CMT.<br />

Clinical Medicine (CM) (8 minimum)—Clinical medicine<br />

credits can come from a variety of sources. Any activity<br />

that has been assigned credit from the American Medical<br />

<strong>Association</strong> (AMA) or other clinical medicine organization<br />

is acceptable in this category. Activities pertaining to<br />

traditional medicine, anatomy and physiology, surgery,<br />

pharmacology, laboratory or imaging, disease processes,<br />

medical research, medical terminology, and other allied<br />

health areas will qualify. In addition to medical speakers<br />

at AHDI-sponsored events, online webinars, or articles in<br />

AHDI publications of a clinical medicine nature, websites<br />

like DiscoveryHealth.com and mycme.com offer excellent<br />

opportunities to earn clinical medicine credit.<br />

Medical Transcription Tools (MTT) (4 minimum)—The<br />

category of medical transcription tools covers topics<br />

like English language usage, MT resources and references,<br />

applied standards in practice (QA, style, <strong>for</strong>matting,<br />

proofing/editing, etc), document processing tools<br />

like abbreviation expanders and Microsoft Word, and<br />

developing a quality improvement program. In-service<br />

training provided by employers may be creditworthy<br />

in this category if it pertains to helping CMTs be more<br />

productive on the job.<br />

Technology and the Workplace (TW) (6 minimum)—With<br />

technology playing a more important role in the lives<br />

of transcriptionists, the requirements in this category<br />

were increased in 2006 from a minimum of four to a<br />

minimum of six. TW credits relate to anything having<br />

to do with technology in the transcription industry and/<br />

or issues that pertain to the workplace. Topics range<br />

from basic transcription technology (ASPs, FTP, encryption,<br />

SRT) to the electronic health record to coding and<br />

reimbursement to trends in healthcare delivery and even<br />

ergonomics and workplace design.<br />

Medicolegal Issues (ML) (6 minimum)—Another category<br />

that had its requirements increased in 2006 is<br />

medicolegal issues. An additional two CECs are now<br />

required every three years. Activities that pertain to risk<br />

management, healthcare-related legislation, HIPAA, the<br />

development of standards (ASTM, HL7, etc), ethics and<br />

confidentiality, accreditation or administrative standards,<br />

and medicolegal terminology and concepts all qualify.<br />

Participating in the annual Advocacy Summit with AHDI<br />

or becoming involved in the development of standards<br />

in the transcription industry by participating in ASTM<br />

meetings are obvious ways to earn ML credits. Medscape.<br />

com is a great resource <strong>for</strong> continuing education credits,<br />

and their “Business of Medicine” site contains creditworthy<br />

articles pertaining to medical malpractice and legal<br />

issues in medicine.<br />

Optional Categories (no minimum)—The complementary<br />

medicine category covers activities related to holistic<br />

and homeopathic medicine, massage therapy, health<br />

and wellness, and veterinary medicine. The professional<br />

development category is where you will find topics on<br />

association leadership, developing communication skills,<br />

time management, supervision/management, and stress<br />

management. Activities in these categories do not serve<br />

as a replacement <strong>for</strong> the 24 required CECs in the core<br />

areas listed above. These credits can be used to satisfy<br />

the additional six credits needed to meet the minimum<br />

of 30 in a three-year cycle.<br />

REGISTERED MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST (RMT)<br />

The RMT credential is based on the skills and knowledge<br />

outlined in the AHDI Model Job Description <strong>for</strong><br />

Level 1 MTs. It mirrors the competencies in the AHDI<br />

Model Curriculum. The purpose of this credential is<br />

the RMt recredentialing process instead<br />

provides hand-picked continuing education <strong>for</strong><br />

the purpose of ensuring that the RMT’s entry-<br />

level skills are current.<br />

to show the industry that the candidate has met the<br />

minimum requirements <strong>for</strong> entry into this field. AHDI<br />

encourages graduates of transcription training programs<br />

to take the RMT exam after graduation. The exam is also<br />

20 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


available <strong>for</strong> practicing transcriptionists with less than<br />

two years of acute care experience or those working in<br />

limited specialties.<br />

RECREDENTIALING OF RMTs<br />

The RMT exam serves to set a benchmark <strong>for</strong> entry into<br />

practice. Successfully passing the exam relays to the<br />

industry that a person who has obtained the RMT credential<br />

has the basic skills needed to work in the field.<br />

There is no requirement <strong>for</strong> the RMT to obtain additional<br />

knowledge and/or skills other than those that would<br />

help to keep them relevant as entry-level practitioners.<br />

Rather than requiring RMTs to obtain continuing education<br />

credits (which would likely be geared to a higher<br />

level of knowledge than needed), the RMT recredentialing<br />

process instead provides hand-picked continuing<br />

education <strong>for</strong> the purpose of ensuring that the RMT’s<br />

entry-level skills are current. Practitioners who hold the<br />

RMT credential are encouraged to advance to the CMT<br />

level once they have achieved the required experience<br />

in the industry, but they are not required to do so. An<br />

RMT may recredential every three years as an RMT by<br />

completing the RMT Recredentialing Course provided<br />

by AHDI.<br />

RMT RECREDENTIALING COuRSE<br />

The RMT Recredentialing Course provides 11 continuing<br />

education units in three primary content areas.<br />

I. TRANSCRIPTION-RELATED KNOWLEDGE<br />

a. New Prescription Medications<br />

A brief overview of the approval process <strong>for</strong> new<br />

medications in the United States, and a list of the<br />

most commonly prescribed medications.<br />

b. Common Procedures and Report Types<br />

A recap of terminology pertaining to the most<br />

common report types and procedures.<br />

c. Medical Transcription Style Updates<br />

An overview of evolving trends in medical transcription<br />

style, including a review of dangerous<br />

abbreviations and their use.<br />

d. Common Grammar, Punctuation, and Style Errors<br />

A review of the most common grammar, punctuation,<br />

and style errors in transcription, including<br />

sound-a-likes, abbreviations, and <strong>for</strong>matting.<br />

e. Editing and Proofreading<br />

A review of the basic concepts of editing and<br />

proofreading.<br />

Continued on next page<br />

voLuME 5 • IssuE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

ML<br />

IN SEARCh OF ThE ELuSIvE MEDICOLEGAL CREDIT<br />

More than any other category, CMTs report struggling to<br />

find enough medicolegal credits to recertify. Since 2006,<br />

the minimum requirement has increased from four to<br />

six CECs, representing the increasingly important role<br />

medicolegal issues play in healthcare documentation.<br />

Here is a list of available credits in the ML category that<br />

you may not have considered.<br />

• Stedman’s Guide to the HIPAA Privacy Rule (3 CECs).<br />

Write a 200-word summary of what you learned by<br />

reading this book to earn the credits.<br />

• Write your own creditworthy article on a medicolegal<br />

topic. If it is published, you receive 2 ML CECs. If you<br />

also write a quiz to accompany the article, you receive<br />

an additional 1 ML CEC.<br />

• Give a creditworthy presentation on a medicolegal<br />

topic. Writing and delivering the presentation to an<br />

audience of your peers will earn you 2 ML CECs.<br />

• AHDI has partnered with AHIMA to offer online continuing<br />

education courses. The Building the Foundation<br />

<strong>for</strong> the Privacy Initiative course is worth 4 ML CECs.<br />

You can read more about these course offerings on the<br />

AHDI website by going to Education/Training and then<br />

Continuing Education.<br />

• At the time of this printing, there are 8 ML CECs available<br />

as quizzes on the AHDI website that are tied to<br />

articles in AHDI publications. You will find the list at<br />

the AHDI website under Education/Training > Continuing<br />

Education > Continuing Education Through AHDI<br />

Publications.<br />

21


Continuing EduCation<br />

A Commitment to Lifelong Learning<br />

II. INDUSTRY TRENDS AND DRIVERS<br />

a. Standard-Setting Organizations<br />

An overview of the standard-setting organizations<br />

and their relevance in medical transcription,<br />

including ASTM, SNOMED, HL7, CDA4CDT<br />

(Health Story Project), HIPAA<br />

b. Advances in Technology<br />

An overview of speech recognition technology,<br />

Benchmark KB, social networking, etc.<br />

c. Privacy and Security Issues<br />

An overview of HIPAA rules and how they impact<br />

medical transcriptionists, as well as confidentiality<br />

and security issues.<br />

III. TRANSCRIPTION BUSINESS ISSUES<br />

a. Employment Status<br />

Emphasize the difference between an employee<br />

and an independent contractor.<br />

b. Computer Use and Maintenance<br />

Illustrate familiarity with the mechanics of a computer,<br />

how to use it, and how to maintain it.<br />

c. Ethical Business Practices<br />

A review of ethical business standards in medical transcription<br />

according to the AHDI Code of Ethics.<br />

By successfully completing the course and passing the<br />

Plan to earn your credits gradually over the<br />

three-year cycle.<br />

final exam with a score of at least 75%, RMTs are recredentialed<br />

<strong>for</strong> an additional three-year cycle. Candidates<br />

are given access to the online course <strong>for</strong> a total of 30<br />

days, though the course should take no longer than five<br />

or six hours to complete.<br />

CMTs who are interested in taking the RMT<br />

Recredentialing course <strong>for</strong> credit can earn a total of 11<br />

CECs in the following categories upon successfully passing<br />

the course and final exam: two Clinical Medicine<br />

(CM), three Medical Transcription Tools (MTT), three<br />

Medicolegal (ML), two Technology and the Workplace<br />

(TW), and one Professional Development (PD).<br />

ORGANIZING YOuR CECs<br />

CMTs shouldn’t wait until the last minute to fulfill their<br />

CMT/RMT PLAQuES<br />

Proudly display your CMT or RMT status with this impressive<br />

wood plaque. Approximately 8 inches by 10 inches in<br />

size with a walnut finish, the CMT plaque comes with a<br />

teal background (the RMT with a black background) and<br />

platinum lettering. Both plaques come personalized with<br />

your name and date of certification. Date plates (included<br />

in purchase) track your recertification.<br />

Go to the AHDI online store to order.<br />

recertification requirements. Plan to earn your credits<br />

gradually over the three-year cycle. If you need help<br />

organizing the credits you have earned, print out a<br />

copy of the CE Summary Form (available on the AHDI<br />

website under Education/Training > Credentials and<br />

Designations > CMT) and fill in the <strong>for</strong>m as you participate<br />

in each activity. Consider keeping the <strong>for</strong>m, along<br />

with the proof of CEC documents, in a folder where<br />

they can be easily accessed throughout the cycle. When<br />

the time comes to submit your recertification, as long as<br />

you have not been randomly chosen <strong>for</strong> audit, you only<br />

need to send in the Statement and Agreement <strong>for</strong>m (sent<br />

to you prior to the expiration of your credential) and<br />

the CE Summary Form. If you are audited, you will also<br />

need to submit the proof of CEC documents, 200-word<br />

summaries you’ve written, and copies of the quizzes/<br />

puzzles you have completed <strong>for</strong> credit.<br />

Once you have successfully recertified your CMT<br />

or recredentialed your RMT, pat yourself on the back<br />

and celebrate! You have embraced lifelong learning and<br />

proven to your profession that you are truly committed to<br />

being the best you can be. Wear those letters proudly. P<br />

Kim Buchanan, CMT, AhDI-F, is the director of credentialing and<br />

education <strong>for</strong> AHDI.<br />

22 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


AHDI Hall of Fame<br />

AHDI has started a member recognition program—the<br />

AHDI Hall of Fame—as part of our desire to highlight<br />

and recognize AHDI members at all levels of the<br />

association who are impacting our mission, goals, and<br />

objectives. AHDI will be awarding Hall of Fame status<br />

to up to 12 members on an annual basis starting in<br />

2009. Hall of Fame winners will be announced at the<br />

AHDI Annual Convention & Expo and featured in association<br />

publications and on our website throughout the<br />

next year. From those 12 HOF winners, the AHDI Member<br />

Name: Dianna Hall, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

Component: Michigan <strong>Association</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Healthcare</strong> <strong>Documentation</strong> Integrity<br />

Executive Leadership Positions (state level): Michigan Delegate, President,<br />

Immediate Past President, Secretary<br />

Executive Leadership Positions (local level): Bay Area Chapter President,<br />

Immediate Past President, Vice President<br />

Committees, Task Forces, Alliances (national): Delegate Lead Team,<br />

Membership Advisory Council, Nominating Committee, Sustained Structure<br />

Task Force, National Task Force <strong>for</strong> Component Relations, Membership<br />

Committee<br />

Committees, Task Forces, Alliances (state): Alliance with Michigan AHIMA<br />

Committees, Task Forces, Alliances (local): Educational alliance with Mid-<br />

Michigan Chapter in joint annual symposium and RMT/CMT study group<br />

“Dianna is very dedicated to the members of the association at every level. At every component meeting, she welcomes new<br />

members and answers all questions to the best of her ability. She is always the first to volunteer when something needs to be<br />

done. She always takes the extra step to ensure the success of any project. Dianna is a skilled communicator, easily transferring<br />

in<strong>for</strong>mation to all association components. Dianna’s experience within the association makes her a very valuable resource <strong>for</strong><br />

future leaders.”<br />

“Dianna is not afraid to advocate <strong>for</strong> change to further our association, even when there is strong resistance to that change.”<br />

Nominated by: Patricia McLellan; Paul Schaub, RN, MA; and Sheila Guston, CMT<br />

of the Year will be selected by the national awards committee<br />

and announced at ACE.<br />

Learn more about the Hall of Fame program and<br />

how your component can get involved at www.ahdionline.org<br />

>> Get Connected >> Governance >> AHDI<br />

Components.<br />

We begin our 2009 spotlight with this year’s recipient of<br />

AHDI’s Member of the Year award:<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

23


NEWS & WHO’S WHO<br />

POWEr Of 10 CamPaigN<br />

Attendees at ACE 2009 were the first to hear about<br />

AHDI’s new Power of 10, a year-long campaign to raise<br />

$10 from 10,000 MTs by 2010. Why? To support the<br />

association’s advocacy ef<strong>for</strong>ts in Washington, DC, where<br />

AHDI and MTIA are working hard to make sure all<br />

healthcare documentation professionals have a role in<br />

the future of the EHR. Our lobbying firm, along with our<br />

government relations staff, is making sure our sector is<br />

well represented in important meetings and discussions<br />

being held by our nation’s legislators and policymakers<br />

on healthcare re<strong>for</strong>m, criteria and standards <strong>for</strong> EHR<br />

systems, and work<strong>for</strong>ce development in allied health. All<br />

Power of 10 funds go directly to this ef<strong>for</strong>t. Thank you to all<br />

in attendance who stepped up to be the first to contribute<br />

to this important initiative—helping us raise nearly<br />

$2000 toward this goal. If you did not get a chance to<br />

contribute, you can donate to the Power of 10 campaign<br />

in the AHDI Online Store at www.ahdionline.org or by<br />

mail (see website <strong>for</strong> address). Make sure your funds<br />

are clearly marked <strong>for</strong> this campaign, and as a reminder,<br />

donations to this campaign are not tax deductable as<br />

charitable contributions.<br />

rECErtifiCatiON COurSE NOW availablE<br />

fOr rmts!<br />

The highly anticipated recredentialing<br />

process and course <strong>for</strong> RMTs<br />

went live June 1, 2009. Developed<br />

by AHDI and deployed in partnership<br />

with OAK Horizons, Inc., this<br />

course includes 11 chapters covering relevant topics to<br />

ensure that recredentialing RMTs remain current in their<br />

knowledge. Each chapter has a concluding quiz. To pass<br />

the course and renew the RMT credential, participants<br />

must complete all 11 chapters and quizzes, and pass the<br />

final exam.<br />

CMTs interested in earning continuing education<br />

credits toward their recertification may also enroll in<br />

this course. CMTs will receive 11 CECs upon successful<br />

completion of the course: 2 CM, 3 MTT, 3 ML, 2 TW,<br />

and 1 PD.<br />

If you have questions or would like more detailed<br />

in<strong>for</strong>mation about the recredentialing process <strong>for</strong> the<br />

RMT credential, visit the RMT Recredentialing Web page<br />

at http://www.ahdionline.org/scriptcontent/rRecertification.<br />

cfm now. For those who are ready to sign up, you can<br />

either call the office toll free at 800-982-2182 or use the<br />

link below.<br />

http://www.ahdionline.org/Source/Meetings/cMeetingProcess-<br />

Search.cfm?section=events<br />

Cost:<br />

$100 RMT members<br />

$125 RMT nonmembers<br />

$100 CMT members<br />

$125 CMT nonmembers<br />

tHE rESultS arE iN!<br />

AHDI is proud to announce these newly elected directors,<br />

who will serve from 2010–2012:<br />

Sherry Doggett<br />

Brett McCutcheon, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

Lisa Johnson Williams, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

We are also happy to announce the Speaker-elect <strong>for</strong> the<br />

House of Delegates <strong>for</strong> 2009:<br />

Chad Sines, AHDI-F<br />

Thank you, elected leaders and candidates, <strong>for</strong> your<br />

commitment to excellence and support of the <strong>Association</strong><br />

through advocacy, standards-setting, and education.<br />

Thank you, AHDI members, who took the time to cast<br />

your votes and help to shape the future of the association<br />

and industry. On behalf of AHDI members, board of<br />

directors and staff, we congratulate you!<br />

24 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


fOllOW mE tO aHDi ON faCEbOOk!<br />

We at AHDI are encouraging all members to be a part of<br />

what is widely taking the Internet by storm—Facebook!<br />

Everyone is on it, and so is AHDI. Currently, members<br />

are discussing the following:<br />

• <strong>Credentialing</strong><br />

• The Health Story Project<br />

• The Obama Stimulus Plan<br />

• American Recovery & Reinvestment Act<br />

• And more…you’ll have to join to find out!<br />

Not on Facebook yet? It’s free and anyone can join.<br />

When you visit www.facebook.com and create a profile,<br />

you will find us under “<strong>Association</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Healthcare</strong><br />

<strong>Documentation</strong> Integrity.” We already have over 800<br />

fans and are growing every day. If you are a current<br />

member of the AHDI Facebook page and want to help<br />

us grow our numbers, add the tagline “Follow Me to<br />

AHDI on Facebook” to your email taglines with a link<br />

to the page.<br />

SPEECH rECOgNitiON EDitiNg ONliNE<br />

COurSE—NEW!<br />

When used in conjunction with properly trained medical<br />

transcription editors, speech recognition technology<br />

(SRT) has proven its worth by lowering healthcare costs<br />

and providing faster turn-around times. The technology<br />

serves as a bridge to the electronic health record by offering<br />

a familiar and efficient method of data entry to the<br />

medical community. The need <strong>for</strong> qualified SRT editors<br />

is expected to increase in correlation with the growing<br />

healthcare demands of an aging population.<br />

In partnership with TRSi and 3M, and with the<br />

contributions of a volunteer workgroup comprised of<br />

voLuME 5 • IssuE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

25


NEWS & WHO’S WHO<br />

SRT developers, MT managers and supervisors, educators<br />

and practicing medical transcription professionals<br />

from around the country, the <strong>Association</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Healthcare</strong><br />

<strong>Documentation</strong> Integrity (AHDI) has developed the first<br />

of its kind speech recognition editing course which will:<br />

• Assist the practicing MT to confidently make the transition<br />

from standard transcription production worker<br />

to successful SRT knowledge-based worker.<br />

NEW aHDi PrODuCtS!<br />

ACE 2009 Conference<br />

Lapel Pin<br />

If you <strong>for</strong>got to purchase<br />

your commemorative lapel<br />

pin to mark your attendance<br />

at the 31st Annual Convention &<br />

Exposition, or if you were not able to attend the conference<br />

but would like to purchase this beautiful pin, you<br />

still can! Lapel pins are priced at the low rate of $10.<br />

Available while supplies last! Visit the AHDI Online Store<br />

at www.ahdionline.org to purchase this product.<br />

go<br />

conserve<br />

eco<br />

wildlife<br />

hybrid<br />

green<br />

Live green.<br />

Work green.<br />

SAVe<br />

clean air<br />

trees<br />

cars reduce<br />

earth<br />

energy environment<br />

recycle<br />

ahdi<br />

Live Green. Work Green.<br />

The AHDI Live Green,<br />

Work Green t-shirt<br />

is in support of the<br />

<strong>Association</strong>’s ef<strong>for</strong>t to<br />

lessen our carbon footprint.<br />

Each shirt is made<br />

with king-spun cotton and<br />

organic-spun cotton. The<br />

shirt features a beautiful graphic that promotes different<br />

worldly and eco-friendly initiatives. Get yours today!<br />

Available in sizes medium, large, XL, 2X, and 3X while<br />

supplies last. Visit the AHDI Online Store at www.ahdionline.org<br />

to purchase this product.<br />

• Provide medical transcription schools and programs an<br />

option to broaden their curriculum.<br />

• Offer employers an excellent training opportunity <strong>for</strong><br />

their work<strong>for</strong>ce.<br />

Registration <strong>for</strong> this 12-week online course is now open.<br />

The course runs from October 15th – January 15th. Go<br />

to ahdionline.org <strong>for</strong> more in<strong>for</strong>mation and to enroll<br />

today!<br />

CMT PREP QUIZZES Volume II<br />

P L E X U S 2 0 0 7 - 2 0 0 8<br />

CMT Prep Quiz CD II<br />

Members and nonmembers<br />

can now get their<br />

♦ 240 Practice<br />

Questions<br />

© 2009<br />

Published by: hands on the much-antici-<br />

♦ Interactive menu<br />

♦ Detailed answers<br />

& in<strong>for</strong>mation<br />

♦ 12 MTT CEs<br />

pated CMT Prep Quiz CD<br />

II! This CD contains all<br />

240 questions, answers,<br />

and descriptions as found<br />

in the 2007 & 2008 issues of<br />

Plexus magazine. This interactive<br />

CD allows you to take the<br />

quiz on screen, view the answers and descriptions, and<br />

(<strong>for</strong> CMTs seeking CE credits <strong>for</strong> recredentialing) print a<br />

score sheet at the end of each quiz. In addition to some<br />

great level II prep questions, this product will give CMT<br />

candidates practice with on-screen test taking (12 CM<br />

credits available). Visit the AHDI Online Store at<br />

www.ahdionline.org to purchase this product. P<br />

26 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


EvENtS<br />

November<br />

7<br />

Charlotte, North Carolina<br />

Carolinas Regional AHDI,<br />

Annual Symposium,<br />

Holiday Inn Center City<br />

Hotel<br />

14<br />

Madison, Wisconsin<br />

2009 November Regional<br />

Event—Madison, WI:<br />

A single-day, regional event<br />

offered by AHDI national<br />

in conjunction with the<br />

Wisconsin/Minnesota<br />

Chapter of AHDI<br />

14<br />

Dallas, Texas<br />

GDC-ahdi, GDC Board<br />

meeting, Presbyterian<br />

Hospital Dallas, Presby<br />

Cafe<br />

21<br />

Xenia, Ohio<br />

Buckeye Area Chapter,<br />

November 2009 Faceto-Face<br />

Meeting, Greene<br />

Memorial Hospital—<br />

Herman Menapace BLDG<br />

Continue your education<br />

Prepare <strong>for</strong> your credential<br />

Earn 8 CECs <strong>for</strong> each CE course<br />

All from the com<strong>for</strong>t of<br />

your own home!<br />

December<br />

12<br />

Dallas, Texas<br />

GDC-ahdi, General meeting,<br />

Presbyterian Hospital<br />

Dallas, SE conference room<br />

Visit ahdionline.org under<br />

“Professional Development”<br />

and “Continuing Education”<br />

or call 800-982-2182 <strong>for</strong> more<br />

in<strong>for</strong>mation on AHDI and<br />

OAK Horizons course schedules.<br />

voLuME 5 • IssuE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

27


GRASSROOTS<br />

A Call to Action!<br />

BRenDA J. HuRley, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

Without a doubt, we are in difficult times. Medical<br />

transcriptionists and their families are feeling the negative<br />

effects from the current state of our nation’s economy<br />

and its impact on our healthcare system. To add to our<br />

worry, we have the looming impact from technologies<br />

(ie, speech recognition, electronic health record, etc) and<br />

new regulatory compliance requirements (ie, HIPAA,<br />

ARRA, HITECH, etc), so <strong>for</strong> many our world may look<br />

pretty scary.<br />

If there was ever a time <strong>for</strong> a call to action, the time<br />

is definitely now. At the last meeting of the House of<br />

Delegates, I told the story of elephant training. It goes<br />

something like this: A man at the circus watched the<br />

elephants standing quietly while tied by a rope to a<br />

small wooden stake driven in the ground. He asked the<br />

trainer why those big elephants don’t just pull away<br />

from the stake as they surely had the power and <strong>for</strong>ce<br />

to do so. The trainer said that when the elephants were<br />

young they were attached to a huge chain attached to<br />

an immovable steel stake. At first those young elephants<br />

would pull and pull to try to escape but they found that<br />

they could not escape, so in time they had simply given<br />

up trying. Now as adults they can be held with only a<br />

small stake and rope.¹<br />

Perhaps you have been in the same situation, where<br />

no matter what you did or how hard you tried, you<br />

could not make a change or break the chain that held<br />

you back, to the point that now you have also given up<br />

trying. It is indeed a time <strong>for</strong> action—it is time to break<br />

free from whatever barriers have stopped you or held<br />

you back in the past or present.<br />

A great way to take action is to refresh the tools in<br />

your toolkit. First, it is important that you sharpen your<br />

skills in some way—whether it is learning a new specialty,<br />

participating in a component association educational<br />

event, or an association webinar, there are numerous<br />

opportunities <strong>for</strong> you to learn something to add to<br />

and to sharpen your tools in your professional toolkit. A<br />

great example <strong>for</strong> this is another story. This one is about<br />

two woodsmen who had a section of the <strong>for</strong>est to cut<br />

down in three days. One man worked long hours, never<br />

taking a break during the day and putting in many hours<br />

of overtime. The other man took his breaks and worked<br />

only during his scheduled hours. At the end of the three<br />

days, the man who worked the many additional hours<br />

was astonished to find that the other man was able to<br />

It is time to break free from whatever barriers<br />

have stopped you or held you back in the past or present.<br />

cut down more trees. When asked how he did this, the<br />

man said that he found it was important to take the time<br />

to sharpen his saw frequently. As an MT, have you been<br />

doing anything to sharpen your saw lately?<br />

Another way to take action is to demonstrate your<br />

competency in order to stake your claim as an expert in<br />

this profession. If you have not yet become credentialed,<br />

it is time to do so. There are many study groups going on<br />

in communities and online, so jump in and get prepared<br />

<strong>for</strong> the exam, then do it! There are lots of excuses floating<br />

around why credentialing is not important to do, so<br />

if you’re looking <strong>for</strong> an excuse, it will be easy to find one.<br />

I say, become credentialed <strong>for</strong> you! It is your professional<br />

toolkit that will be enhanced when you add a credential<br />

behind your name, as it demonstrates a level of competency<br />

in the skills needed <strong>for</strong> medical transcription. So,<br />

do it <strong>for</strong> you!<br />

It is time now to break free, it is time now <strong>for</strong><br />

action—do it and amaze yourself! You deserve it. P<br />

RefeRence<br />

1. The Portable Pep Talk. Alexander Lockhart, Zander Press, page 13.<br />

Brenda J. Hurley, cMT, AHDI-f, is the 2009 Speaker of the House.<br />

She can be reached at speaker@ahdionline.com.<br />

28 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


Component Spotlight<br />

Navigating a Path to Success<br />

Sherry L. Martin, CMT<br />

The Greater Jacksonville Chapter (GJC) has had a<br />

Certification Connector <strong>for</strong> several years, but we have<br />

had particularly great success with this initiative over<br />

the last two to three years. I think one major reason that<br />

we have been so successful is that individuals in management<br />

roles outside of medical transcription, such as<br />

clinic administrators and hospital health in<strong>for</strong>mation<br />

management (HIM) directors, have taken a keen interest<br />

in what we really do and the important role we play in<br />

healthcare documentation. That interest and willingness<br />

to help us pursue our continuing education and certification<br />

has made all the difference in how successful we<br />

have been. Because some of our local chapter members<br />

had the opportunity and were willing to speak at meetings<br />

about certification when both medical transcriptionists<br />

(MTs) and HIM administration were present, it has<br />

opened doors <strong>for</strong> us that may have otherwise remained<br />

closed. The willingness of our chapter members to seize<br />

this opportunity to advance the profession has been<br />

instrumental in our success.<br />

I want to tell you a little about what we have done in<br />

the past and things that we have adapted and changed<br />

as we have moved <strong>for</strong>ward and continue to advance the<br />

profession.<br />

I joined GJC in 2002, shortly after I passed the “old”<br />

CMT exam. At that time, I didn’t know that there was a<br />

certification connector, let alone that there were other<br />

people out there that I might have been able to prepare<br />

with. But, I was hopeful that someday I might be able to<br />

help someone else who was willing to move <strong>for</strong>ward in<br />

their career to study and take the CMT exam. Not too<br />

long after I passed my test, AAMT changed the <strong>for</strong>mat<br />

of the exam and it became even more critical to prepare<br />

well in advance to successfully pass the new version of<br />

the exam. GJC had acquired several transcribers, SUM<br />

practice tapes, study guides, and other materials over<br />

the years that anyone could check out to help them<br />

prepare <strong>for</strong> the exam. Several members over the years<br />

have taken advantage of this and studied on their own.<br />

Some were successful; others were not. Study groups<br />

were <strong>for</strong>med and met on the weekends at a neighbor-<br />

hood library or other locations, but they tended to fizzle<br />

out due to apathy or just plain running out of available<br />

time. Many people never moved <strong>for</strong>ward with actually<br />

taking the exam <strong>for</strong> one reason or another. Things<br />

became rather stagnant.<br />

Then we had a breakthrough. Lea Sims, CMT,<br />

AHDI-F, and Kristin Wall, AHDI-F, were invited to speak<br />

to the transcription department at Nemours Children’s<br />

Clinic in Jacksonville <strong>for</strong> MT Week. They talked about<br />

the chapter, which several MTs didn’t even know existed,<br />

The willingness of our chapter members to<br />

seize this opportunity to advance the profession has been<br />

instrumental in our success.<br />

the national organization, and the importance of obtaining<br />

their CMT credential and elevating the professionalism<br />

of our industry. Attendees were encouraged to look<br />

at medical transcription not just as a “job” but a profession,<br />

because so many in the medical field still weren’t<br />

aware of the knowledge base and skill sets involved in<br />

being a certified medical transcriptionist and the key<br />

role we play in healthcare documentation. Besides the<br />

transcription manager, also in attendance at that meeting<br />

were the HIM manager and the Nemours Children’s<br />

Clinic Jacksonville administrator. Both of them were very<br />

intrigued by the in<strong>for</strong>mation presented by the speakers.<br />

That particular clinic stresses continuing education <strong>for</strong><br />

all of their medical professionals, and when they realized<br />

that transcription also offered continuing education<br />

opportunities and a certification program, they were very<br />

excited and pursued it proactively.<br />

Nemours made their MTs an offer. They said they<br />

would purchase selected study books <strong>for</strong> anyone who<br />

wanted to participate in the CMT study group. These<br />

study books included the CMT Review Guide, The<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

29


Language of Medicine, Understanding Pharmacology, Human<br />

Diseases, lab and diagnostic disease guides, as well as<br />

the Book of Style, 2nd Edition, <strong>for</strong> anyone who didn’t<br />

already have one. Several of the MTs purchased the Book<br />

of Style Student Workbook on their own a few weeks into<br />

the study group. Nemours also offered to reimburse the<br />

MTs <strong>for</strong> the test fee when they successfully passed. The<br />

MTs were required to take and pass the test within one<br />

year from the beginning of the study group. Nemours<br />

offered a 2% base pay increase <strong>for</strong> anyone who successfully<br />

passed the test. They also offered the group meeting<br />

space at the clinic every two weeks <strong>for</strong> two hours<br />

in an available conference room. This offered the MTs a<br />

familiar setting that cost them nothing. The agreement<br />

also stated that if anyone dropped out of the group after<br />

the books had been purchased <strong>for</strong> them by the clinic, the<br />

MT who dropped out would have to reimburse the clinic<br />

<strong>for</strong> the cost of the books. Nemours employed 10 MTs at<br />

that time; one was already a CMT and a GJC member.<br />

She agreed to lead the Nemours study group. Out of the<br />

remaining nine MTs, eight took on the challenge and<br />

began the study group. Of those eight, one dropped out<br />

of the program after several weeks. Of the remaining<br />

seven, five MTs passed the exam on their first try and the<br />

other two passed on their second attempt. Pretty good<br />

success rate! Oh, one more thing—another bonus <strong>for</strong><br />

the MTs was that <strong>for</strong> every employee who successfully<br />

passed the test, Nemours paid <strong>for</strong> their first year’s dues<br />

<strong>for</strong> both AHDI national and <strong>for</strong> GJC. Pretty sweet deal!<br />

News of the Nemours study group got out fast.<br />

Several MTs from the chapter who were interested in<br />

continuing to study <strong>for</strong> the exam with a buddy asked if<br />

they could join the Nemours group. The Nemours MTs<br />

were happy to oblige. Nemours administration was very<br />

willing to accommodate more participants, but did not<br />

purchase materials <strong>for</strong> anyone other than their employees.<br />

As word got out about the success of the Nemours<br />

study group and we acknowledged the new CMTs in<br />

our chapter newsletter and at chapter meetings, more<br />

MTs became interested in pursuing certification. Another<br />

big event <strong>for</strong> our chapter started the next round of<br />

participation.<br />

In January 2009, we were privileged to have Peter<br />

Preziosi, PhD, CAE; Lea Sims, CMT, AHDI-F; and<br />

Victoria Davis, the transcription manager <strong>for</strong> Mayo Clinic<br />

Jacksonville, speak at our January chapter meeting,<br />

which was held in an open panel discussion <strong>for</strong>mat. I<br />

had recently started a new management job with Baptist<br />

Health, a five-hospital healthcare system in Jacksonville,<br />

earlier that month. We had a fantastic turnout that day,<br />

with many MTs who had never been to a chapter meeting<br />

and who came to see what we were all about and to<br />

hear from the “big guy” himself. Once again, the importance<br />

of credentialing in our profession was discussed<br />

by Lea and Peter. This time around, we had even more<br />

interest in starting study groups from multiple MTs.<br />

Mayo Clinic MTs were particularly vocal and decided<br />

It’s not all about “what’s in it <strong>for</strong> me”<br />

with this group of MTs.<br />

to take the plunge. They started three different study<br />

groups among their MT work<strong>for</strong>ce. Rose Hayden, CMT,<br />

our 2007–2008 chapter president, works <strong>for</strong> Mayo, and<br />

she participated in one of these groups. As Mayo was<br />

not able to provide the study materials as Nemours had<br />

done, many of the Nemours MTs offered to loan out their<br />

study materials to the Mayo MTs to help them achieve<br />

their goals. Out of approximately 75 MTs at Mayo,<br />

about 20 started in one of three study groups. Five left<br />

the groups, leaving 15 active remaining in the study<br />

groups. Of those 15, so far six have successfully passed<br />

their exam. The remaining nine are still studying and<br />

preparing <strong>for</strong> their turn at success. One thing to mention<br />

about Mayo Clinic is that while they do reimburse the<br />

cost of the exam when it is successfully completed, they<br />

do not offer any pay increase <strong>for</strong> the CMT credential. I<br />

mention this only because even though these MTs aren’t<br />

getting more “money” <strong>for</strong> their credential, they wanted<br />

to achieve this goal <strong>for</strong> themselves. We say, “Good <strong>for</strong><br />

them!” It’s not all about “what’s in it <strong>for</strong> me” with this<br />

group of MTs.<br />

Both groups followed the AHDI recommended<br />

<strong>for</strong>mat of covering assigned chapters ahead of time,<br />

covering usually two chapters at each group meeting,<br />

taking journal quizzes during the meetings, going over<br />

the Mega MT Challenge questions as a group, and other<br />

group activities. But, what is important to remember is<br />

that the bulk of the studying was done at the initiative<br />

of each individual MT. They felt a responsibility to their<br />

study group leader and each other to come prepared to<br />

the meetings. They didn’t want to let each other down.<br />

Some finished early, as they studied ahead (and wanted<br />

to get it over with!), while others needed more time to<br />

prepare be<strong>for</strong>e they felt ready to take the test successfully.<br />

30 noVemBeR 2009 www.aHDIonlIne.oRg


One thing that was said to me was this—those who came<br />

to every meeting were the ones who were the most successful.<br />

These individuals are the future mentors <strong>for</strong> our<br />

other chapter members.<br />

In all, in the last two years, the Greater Jacksonville<br />

Chapter is proud to say that we have helped 13 MTs<br />

achieve their goal of becoming a Certified Medical<br />

Transcriptionist. With many more on the way!<br />

Besides organized study groups, GJC has also had<br />

in place <strong>for</strong> quite some time a mentoring program that<br />

we call Pass The Torch. This is <strong>for</strong> individuals who want<br />

to study on their own with a mentor or as part of an<br />

existing study group. We offer this program to any MT,<br />

whether they are a chapter member or not. We offer<br />

the opportunity to check out study materials we have<br />

acquired over time, as mentioned previously. We do<br />

charge a nominal fee of members and nonmembers to<br />

check out materials.<br />

Now that I am in a managerial role with a large hospital<br />

system, I have made it one of my goals to encourage<br />

all of my MTs to become certified. I have been working<br />

diligently with my HIM director, who has agreed<br />

to help me achieve this goal. My director also attended<br />

that January meeting and was very impressed with what<br />

was said there. We recently purchased the Book of Style,<br />

3rd edition, <strong>for</strong> each of my 25 MTs. I have also received<br />

approval to purchase 10 CMT Review Guides, which are<br />

on their way to us now to get us started with the first<br />

group. At my next transcription meeting, I plan to get<br />

a study group organized and in place with my MTs. I’m<br />

following the GJC <strong>for</strong>mat and plan to be the leader <strong>for</strong><br />

our study group. So far, 10 people have stated they are<br />

willing to move <strong>for</strong>ward and take the next step in their<br />

professional career. My MTs are very excited at changes<br />

I am slowly implementing and the encouragement I am<br />

giving them, and my director is as well. We are working<br />

on a monetary compensation package <strong>for</strong> those who pass<br />

the exam, and we have already gotten approval <strong>for</strong> reimbursement<br />

of exam costs after successful completion of<br />

the test. It’s a very exciting time at Baptist right now <strong>for</strong><br />

my team, as they have never had this kind of encouragement<br />

<strong>for</strong> their field.<br />

While I know most of my article has talked about<br />

CMT exam prep, we have not yet had the opportunity to<br />

set up RMT study groups. That may be changing in the<br />

near future. At our last chapter meeting, we had a very<br />

large group of students from a local college transcription<br />

study program. They were extremely interested in what<br />

we as a chapter have to offer them, and I’ve had some<br />

communication with the teacher of that program about<br />

preparing <strong>for</strong> the RMT and CMT exams. I have a feeling<br />

we’ll be helping to get yet another study group started up<br />

in the very near future.<br />

In conclusion, I believe the success of the Greater<br />

Jacksonville Chapter’s CMT study group initiative is<br />

directly tied to the personal involvement of chapter<br />

members speaking to other MTs and healthcare professionals<br />

in the community and stressing the importance<br />

of credentialing in our field, our willingness to take on<br />

the challenge to mentor and lead these groups, and the<br />

encouragement we give be<strong>for</strong>e, during, and after. We are<br />

excited to continue to bring new credentialed members<br />

to our transcription community. P<br />

Sherry Martin, CMt, is the transcription manager <strong>for</strong> Baptist<br />

Health, a 1000-bed, 5-hospital healthcare system in Jacksonville,<br />

Florida. She is the 2009 president of the Greater Jacksonville Chapter<br />

of AHDI. Sherry has been in the medical transcription industry <strong>for</strong> over<br />

21 years and has been a certified medical transcriptionist since 2002.<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

31


CMT PREP QUIZ<br />

Deb Schreiber, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

Q 1 CliniCal MediCine<br />

This section is designed <strong>for</strong> candidates<br />

preparing <strong>for</strong> the certification exam. Each<br />

issue of Plexus will feature 20 practice<br />

questions to assist test-takers in self-assessment<br />

and continued study. Select the most<br />

correct answer to the questions provided.<br />

You will find answers and study guidance at<br />

the end of this section.<br />

1. The gland that controls functional<br />

maturation of lymphocytes is the<br />

A. pituitary<br />

B. thymus<br />

C. adrenal<br />

D. thyroid<br />

2. The term half-life refers to the<br />

A. contraindication of a drug.<br />

B. duration of efficacy <strong>for</strong> a drug<br />

be<strong>for</strong>e it expires and must be<br />

discarded.<br />

C. duration of efficacy <strong>for</strong> a drug<br />

within the blood stream be<strong>for</strong>e it<br />

must be readministered.<br />

D. decreased susceptibility to the<br />

effects of a drug in a patient who<br />

has developed a tolerance <strong>for</strong> it.<br />

3. Which of the following refers to<br />

normal vision?<br />

A. emmetropia<br />

B. presbyopia<br />

C. hyperopia<br />

D. myopia<br />

4. The abbreviation YAG refers to a<br />

A. laser.<br />

B. clamp.<br />

C. bone saw.<br />

D. microscope.<br />

5. The ciliary body is found in the<br />

A. small intestine.<br />

B. ear.<br />

C. eye.<br />

D. nerves.<br />

6. The normal value range <strong>for</strong> albumin<br />

is<br />

A. 15-45 mcg/dL.<br />

B. 3.5-5.0 g/dL.<br />

C. 24-30 mEq/L.<br />

D. 5-20 mg/dL.<br />

7. Candida albicans is best treated<br />

with<br />

A. Savlon.<br />

B. Daktarin.<br />

C. Clotrimazole cream.<br />

D. metronidazole gel.<br />

8. Which of the following lies fully<br />

ipsilateral to the left iliac region?<br />

A. epigastric region<br />

B. left hypochondriac region<br />

C. right inguinal region<br />

D. hypogastric region<br />

9. Which of the following is a carbohydrate?<br />

A. monosaccharide<br />

B. triglyceride<br />

C. polypeptide<br />

D. eicosanoids<br />

10. bruxism is defined as chronic<br />

A. belching.<br />

B. teeth grinding.<br />

C. hiccupping.<br />

D. grunting.<br />

11. in what setting would the acronym<br />

TrALi be used?<br />

A. By a pulmonologist dictating on a<br />

patient with lung injury.<br />

B. By an obstetrician dictating on a<br />

patient in labor and delivery.<br />

C. By a surgeon dictating on<br />

a patient undergoing an<br />

appendectomy.<br />

D. By a family practitioner dictating<br />

on a patient with hives.<br />

12. What is the correct use <strong>for</strong> the<br />

medication brovana?<br />

A. antiemetic<br />

B. antibiotic<br />

C. antipruritic<br />

D. bronchodilator<br />

13. What is the normal range of<br />

serum potassium?<br />

A. 3.7 to 6.2 mEq/L<br />

B. 2.7 to 6.2 mEq/L<br />

C. 2.7 to 5.2 mEq/L<br />

D. 3.7 to 5.2 mEq/L<br />

14. What is the normal range of<br />

serum sodium?<br />

A. 125 to 145 mEq/L<br />

B. 135 to 145 mEq/L<br />

C. 125 to 135 mEq/L<br />

D. 135 to 155 mEq/L<br />

15. These three tick-borne illnesses<br />

have what in common?<br />

A. Rocky Mountain spotted fever,<br />

ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis. They<br />

are all viruses.<br />

B. Lyme disease, ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis.<br />

They are all viruses.<br />

C. Rocky Mountain spotted fever,<br />

ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis. They<br />

are all rickettsial diseases.<br />

D. Lyme disease, ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis.<br />

They are all rickettsial<br />

diseases.<br />

16. Which sentence in a dictated<br />

report should be flagged <strong>for</strong> the<br />

dictator?<br />

A. “The patient’s serum electrolytes<br />

were normal with a sodium of<br />

140, potassium of 4, and chloride<br />

of 100.”<br />

B. “The patient’s serum electrolytes<br />

were normal with a sodium of<br />

145, potassium of 3.9, and chloride<br />

of 99.”<br />

C. “The patient’s serum electrolytes<br />

were normal with a sodium of<br />

145, potassium of 7.0, and chloride<br />

of 100.”<br />

D. “The patient’s serum electrolytes<br />

were normal with a sodium of<br />

140, potassium of 4.4, and chloride<br />

of 102.”<br />

32 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


17. Which physician would most<br />

likely use the ASA Grade?<br />

A. gastroenterologist<br />

B. otolaryngologist<br />

C. anesthesiologist<br />

D. optometrist.<br />

18. Which sentence is transcribed<br />

incorrectly?<br />

A. “The patient’s mucous membranes<br />

were moist and he had clear<br />

mucus from the nares.”<br />

B. “The mucus was mixed with<br />

blood and pus.”<br />

C. “The patient’s mucous membranes<br />

were moist and he had clear<br />

mucous from the nares.”<br />

D. “The mucous membranes were<br />

dry and cracked; no mucus was<br />

seen.”<br />

19. A minimally invasive surgical<br />

procedure used to diagnose and treat<br />

illness or injury to the lung and other<br />

organs in the thorax.<br />

A. PTFE<br />

B. CABG<br />

C. PTSD<br />

D. VATS<br />

20. Which sign means an involuntary<br />

resistance to passive movement as<br />

may occur in cerebral cortical disorders?<br />

A. dysmetria<br />

B. snout<br />

C. gegenhalten<br />

D. Apley<br />

FinD AnSWerS AnD GuiDAnce on<br />

pAGe 36<br />

COMPONENT CORNER<br />

Buckeye Area Chapter of AHDI<br />

Fall mini-Symposium<br />

Saturday, November 21, 2009<br />

Galion Free Methodist Church,<br />

Galion, Ohio 44833<br />

4 CECs anticipated in OB/GYN,<br />

Cardiology, Grammar & BOS<br />

Registration and In<strong>for</strong>mation:<br />

BAC-AHDI@BAC-AHDI.org or<br />

http://www.bac-ahdi.org<br />

*Speakers & CECs subject to change<br />

without notice<br />

Florida Nature Coast Chapter<br />

Fall Symposium<br />

November 7, 2009, 8:30 a.m. to<br />

2:00 p.m.<br />

Best Western Hotel,<br />

30307 Cortez Blvd (I-75 and Hwy 50),<br />

Brooksville, FL 34602<br />

Alternative Medicine: Reflexology,<br />

Fatty Acids and Mental Health,<br />

Eating to Live!<br />

2.5 CM, 1.5 Comp Med CECs<br />

Gail Smith, CMT, (352) 666-4728 or<br />

gsmith24@tampabay.rr.com<br />

Ohio Valley Chapter<br />

West Virginia<br />

business meeting and continuing<br />

education<br />

Wednesday, November 11, 2009,<br />

6:00 p.m.<br />

Location: Online, by phone, and several<br />

remote ‘attendance’ locations<br />

For more in<strong>for</strong>mation, contact Lee Ann<br />

Wilmot, CMT, AHDI-F, at 304-242-<br />

6656 or lawilmotcmt@comcast.net<br />

Join the ONLINE ASSOCIATION<br />

of AHDI<br />

• A component without walls<br />

• All business and interaction<br />

conducted solely via the Internet<br />

• Network with MTs worldwide<br />

• Mentor or be mentored in our<br />

mentoring program<br />

• Obtain CECs conveniently online<br />

• Open 24/7<br />

• Webinar room <strong>for</strong> rent<br />

www.oa-ahdi.org<br />

hoW To SubmiT A componenT AD<br />

Send ad in a Word document, 50 words<br />

maximum. Submit ads using the following<br />

template to kwall@ahdionline.org:<br />

component name:<br />

event Title:<br />

Date and Time:<br />

Location:<br />

cecs:<br />

Details:<br />

contact and/or web info:<br />

voLuME 5 • IssuE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

33


LET’S TALK TERMS<br />

AHDI RESEARCH TEAM<br />

Term DeFiniTion<br />

cerefolin nAc A vitamin combination used to manage hyperhomocysteinemia or to supplement the<br />

diet. Generic: L-methylfolate/methylcobalamin/N-acetylcysteine.<br />

Duetact® Combination drug (glimepiride and pioglitazone) used to treat type II diabetes in<br />

patients who do not require insulin injections.<br />

Dura Star balloon Facilitates the post-delivery expansion of stents in coronary arteries.<br />

Dura Star dilatation catheter Used <strong>for</strong> balloon dilatation of the stenotic portion of a coronary artery or bypass graft<br />

stenosis <strong>for</strong> the purpose of improving myocardial perfusion.<br />

endometrin Vaginal suppository used to increase the level of progesterone in patients taking fertility<br />

treatments. Generic: progesterone.<br />

FlexiFit Flexible, com<strong>for</strong>table CPAP mask <strong>for</strong> sleep apnea.<br />

ixempra Medication used to treat metastatic or locally advanced breast cancer.<br />

Generic: ixabepilone.<br />

Kapidex Delayed-release medication used to help heal erosive esophogitis and used to treat<br />

heartburn related to nonerosive gastroesophageal reflux disease.<br />

Generic: dexlansoprazole.<br />

Lexiscan A pharmacologic stress agent used <strong>for</strong> radionuclide myocardial perfusion imaging in<br />

patients who are unable to adequately per<strong>for</strong>m an exercise stress test.<br />

medtronic Sprint Fidelis lead Defibrillator lead.<br />

rhinostat® Systems Dosage titration system designed to gradually wean rhinitis medicamentosa patients<br />

from decongestant nasal sprays<br />

Sentinol® Self-expanding<br />

nitinol biliary Stent System<br />

A stent used to treat strictures caused by malignant neoplasms in biliary ducts.<br />

symmastia A condition in which breast implants are improperly placed during surgery, or can<br />

migrate, and appear “pushed together” with lack of separation or cleavage<br />

(“uni-boob”). Also synmastia.<br />

synmastia A condition in which breast implants are improperly placed during surgery, or can<br />

migrate, and appear “pushed together” with lack of separation or cleavage<br />

(“uni-boob”). Also symmastia.<br />

Toviaz Treatment <strong>for</strong> overactive bladder, including symptoms of urinary frequency, urgency,<br />

and urge incontinence. Generic: fesoterodine fumarate<br />

Tykerb Used to treat advanced or metastatic breast cancer (this medication is indicated to be<br />

used in combination with capecitabine). Generic: lapatinib<br />

Xpert Self-expanding Stent<br />

System<br />

4F compatible self-expanding stent system, specifically designed <strong>for</strong> small vessels with a<br />

focus on hemodynamics<br />

Zarontin A medication given <strong>for</strong> the treatment of absence (petit mal) epilepsy.<br />

Generic: ethosuximide.<br />

34 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


mAnuFAcTurer Source DoSe inFormATion<br />

Pan American Laboratories panlab.com<br />

Cerner Multum, Inc. Drugs.com 30 mg/2 mg; 30 mg/4 mg<br />

Cordis cordis.com<br />

Cordis cordis.com<br />

Ferring Pharmaceuticals drugs.com 100 mg vaginal insert<br />

Fisher and Paykel directhomemedical.com<br />

Bristol-Myers Squibb ixempra.com IV infusion<br />

Takeda Pharmaceuticals<br />

America, Inc<br />

Rxlist.com 30 mg, 60 mg capsules<br />

Astellas Pharma US, Inc. Lexiscan.com 0.4 mg/5 mL IV injection<br />

<strong>for</strong> equal to 10 seconds<br />

Medtronic medtronic.com<br />

Rhinostat Systems, LLC nasalspray.com Dispenser bottles, dosage<br />

titrated at 15% per day<br />

between 17 and 42 days<br />

Boston Scientific BostonScientific.com<br />

Breastplasticsurgery.com<br />

Breastplasticsurgery.com<br />

Pfizer pfizerpro.com 4 mg and 8 mg tablets<br />

GlaxoSmithKline Rxlist.com 250 mg tablets<br />

Abbott Vascular abbottvascular.com<br />

Parke-Davis, a Division of<br />

Pfizer, Inc.<br />

Rxlist.com 250 mg, 500 mg capsules<br />

AhDi reSeArch TeAm<br />

memberS<br />

Christette Cromarty, RMT<br />

Kerri Dobbins, CMT<br />

Jami Fineberg, CMT, AHDI-F<br />

Debra Hahn<br />

Deb Hanson-Ericsson, CMT<br />

Michelle Holden, CMT<br />

Joni Joyner<br />

Kathy Muelker, CMT<br />

voLuME 5 • IssuE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

35


CMT PREP QUIZ<br />

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 33<br />

AnSWerS AnD GuiDAnce<br />

1. Answer b. Lymphocytes that originate<br />

from stem cells in the bone marrow<br />

pass through the thymus gland<br />

where they mature and develop into<br />

activated T-lymphocytes, able to<br />

respond to antigens elsewhere in the<br />

body.<br />

2. Answer c. A drug’s half-life is the<br />

time required <strong>for</strong> the level of that<br />

drug in serum to decrease from<br />

100% to 50%; thus, it relates to how<br />

long the drug remains effective in the<br />

blood stream. A drug with a shorter<br />

half-life needs to be administered<br />

more often or manufactured in an<br />

extended- or time-released <strong>for</strong>m.<br />

3. Answer A. An emmetropic eye is<br />

an eye that can sufficiently refract<br />

light rays from an object 6 m away to<br />

focus a clear image on the retina. All<br />

the others are disorders or abnormalities<br />

of vision.<br />

4. Answer A. The abbreviation YAG<br />

(yttrium aluminum garnet) is seen<br />

in association with many modern<br />

surgical lasers, most commonly<br />

linked with holmium (Ho:LAG),<br />

neodymium (Nd:YAG), and erbium<br />

(Er:YAG). It is also seen in combination<br />

with a manufacturer or product<br />

name, as in Lasertek YAG, Lumonics<br />

YAG, and Carl Zeiss YAG.<br />

5. Answer c. The ciliary body is the<br />

thickest portion of the vascular tunic,<br />

one of three tunic layers of the wall<br />

of the eyeball. It extends from the<br />

ora serata to a point just behind the<br />

sclerocorneal junction. The ciliary<br />

body consists of the ciliary processes<br />

and the ciliary muscle.<br />

6. Answer b. The other value ranges<br />

provided are <strong>for</strong>: (A) ammonia, (C)<br />

bicarbonate, (D) BUN.<br />

7. Answer c. Candida albicans, is<br />

yeast that necessitates treatment with<br />

an antifungal medication, such as<br />

clotrimazole. This active ingredient<br />

interferes with fungal cell membranes<br />

and prohibits the production<br />

of ergosterol, essential to the stability<br />

of the cell membrane.<br />

8. Answer b. Ipsilateral refers to<br />

being on the same side, so in this<br />

case, the only region that would be<br />

found on the same side (left) would<br />

be the left hypochondriac region.<br />

9. Answer A. Eicosanoids and triglycerides<br />

are both lipids, dipeptides are<br />

amino acid pairs necessary in the<br />

<strong>for</strong>mation of proteins, and monosaccharides<br />

are simple sugars, or<br />

carbohydrates.<br />

10. Answer b. Often a precursor to<br />

TMJ, requiring the use of a mouth<br />

guard, bruxism is the compulsive act<br />

of grinding or clenching one’s teeth,<br />

typically at night. Most patients are<br />

not aware of the compulsion but do<br />

develop symptoms of headache, pain<br />

in the jaw, and neck stiffness as a<br />

result.<br />

11. Answer A. TRALI stands <strong>for</strong><br />

Transfusion Related Acute Lung<br />

Injury. This is a rare but serious<br />

and often fatal respiratory distress<br />

syndrome associated with blood<br />

transfusions.<br />

12. Answer D. Brovana is a longacting<br />

beta2-agonist used long-term<br />

to control symptoms of chronic<br />

obstructive pulmonary disease,<br />

administered through a standard jet<br />

nebulizer.<br />

13. Answer D. Normal levels of serum<br />

potassium are 3.7 to 5.2 mEq/L.<br />

14. Answer b. Normal levels of serum<br />

sodium are 135 to 145 mEq/L.<br />

15. Answer c. Rocky Mountain spotted<br />

fever, ehrlichiosis, and anaplasmosis<br />

are tick-borne rickettsial<br />

diseases (TBRD) and are transmitted<br />

bacterium, not viruses. These three<br />

diseases are common in the United<br />

States, along with some emerging<br />

diseases such as the Rickettsia<br />

parkeri infection. Lyme disease is<br />

also a bacterium, but not rickettsial;<br />

it is caused by Borrelia burgdorferi.<br />

16. Answer c. It may not seem like<br />

much of a difference, but even slight<br />

abnormalities in the electrolytes can<br />

cause big problems. In this case, a<br />

potassium level of 7 is considered<br />

hyperkalemic and can lead to EKG<br />

abnormalities such as peaked T<br />

waves, prolongation of the PR interval,<br />

an absent P wave with widening<br />

of the QRS complex, and finally<br />

ventricular tachycardia or fibrillation.<br />

17. Answer c. An anesthesiologist<br />

uses the American Society of<br />

Anesthesiologists grade (ASA) to<br />

assess the patient’s risk associated<br />

with anesthesia and surgery.<br />

An excellent article explaining<br />

the different levels is here:<br />

http://www.ispub.com/ostia/index.<br />

php?xmlFilePath=journals/ija/vol15n1/<br />

asa.xml<br />

18. Answer c. Mucous is the adjective<br />

and mucus is the noun. Answer C is<br />

incorrect because the sentence uses<br />

“mucous” as both adjective and noun.<br />

36 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


19. Answer D. Video-Assisted<br />

Thoracoscopic Surgery (VATS) is a<br />

minimally invasive surgical procedure<br />

used to diagnose and treat illness<br />

or injury to the lung and other<br />

organs in the chest cavity (thorax).<br />

During VATS, a tiny camera with<br />

a light source is inserted through<br />

a small incision between the ribs.<br />

A second small incision is used to<br />

insert special instruments between<br />

the ribs into the chest cavity.<br />

20. Answer c. gegenhalten, sometimes<br />

called paratonia, is a sign that<br />

would most commonly be dictated<br />

by a neurologist. P<br />

Deb Schreiber, cmT, AhDi-F, has been a<br />

medical transcriptionist since 1994 when she<br />

switched from a nursing career that included<br />

working in the ICU and OR. Becoming certifi<br />

ed in 2003, she works at Boone Hospital<br />

Center and per<strong>for</strong>ms QA <strong>for</strong> their department.<br />

She serves on the Missouri AHDI board as<br />

Director at Large.<br />

marketplace<br />

To Advertise in Marketplace<br />

Contact Jeff Rhodes at 410-584-1952 or<br />

e-mail ahdi@networkmediapartners.com<br />

voLuME 5 • IssuE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

37


FUNNY BONE<br />

The LighTeR Side of aging*<br />

Signs That You’re Growing Old<br />

RichaRd LedeReR, PhD<br />

There are many signs that you might be more than halfway<br />

up the stairway to Heaven. Take clothing.<br />

Wal-Mart and Target seem to share your fashion<br />

sense. You realize that all those geeky people in Bermuda<br />

shorts walking around Disney World include you. Your<br />

pants are hiked up to your armpits. Or they start below<br />

your belly. The end of your tie doesn’t come anywhere<br />

near the top of your pants.<br />

As a public service, you have agreed to never appear<br />

on the beach in a Speedo again.<br />

Even your footwear gives you away: You resort to<br />

slip-on shoes or Velcro straps. And you wear dark socks<br />

with your sandals.<br />

You know you’re growing old when...<br />

• The word spry actually applies to you.<br />

• You finally reach the top of the ladder, only to find that<br />

it’s leaning against the wrong wall.<br />

• You know all the answers, but nobody asks you the<br />

questions.<br />

• Your favorite part of the newspaper is “Fifty Years Ago<br />

Today.”<br />

• On the golf course you try to shoot your age, but you<br />

shoot your weight instead.<br />

• You choose your cereal <strong>for</strong> the fiber, not the toy.<br />

• You regret all those temptations you resisted.<br />

• You just can’t stand people who are intolerant.<br />

• A <strong>for</strong>tuneteller offers to read your face.<br />

• You see a pretty young girl and wonder what her<br />

mother looks like.<br />

• The pretty girl you smile at thinks you are one of her<br />

father’s friends. And she opens the door <strong>for</strong> you.<br />

• When you whistle at a pretty girl, she thinks you’re<br />

calling her dog.<br />

• All your dreams about girls are reruns.<br />

• The little gray-haired lady you help across the street is<br />

your wife.<br />

• Your children are starting to wrinkle.<br />

• Your grandkids look like they should be in middle<br />

school, yet here you are attending their college<br />

graduation.<br />

• You would rather go to work than stay home sick.<br />

• When you have a choice of temptations, you choose<br />

the one that gets you home earlier.<br />

• Dinner and a movie are the whole date, not just the<br />

start of one.<br />

• You subscribe to cable television <strong>for</strong> the Weather<br />

Channel.<br />

• You have more hair on your ears than on your head.<br />

• Your wife tells you to pull in your stomach, and you<br />

already have.<br />

• By the time you’ve lit the last candle on the birthday<br />

cake, the first one has burned out.<br />

• When you finally get all your birthday candles lit, they<br />

set off the smoke alarm.<br />

• Your broad mind and narrow waist have exchanged<br />

places. You’re 16 around the neck, 42 around the waist,<br />

and 102 around the golf course.<br />

• You are starting to like accordion music.<br />

• You remember old radio shows better than the TV<br />

show you watched last week. And the radio shows<br />

were better, by the way.<br />

• You instruct your barber never to trim hair off the top<br />

of your head.<br />

• For your birthday you receive your first nose-hair<br />

clippers.<br />

• You’ve come to the annoying realization that your parents<br />

were right about almost everything.<br />

• You don’t care where your spouse goes, just as long as<br />

you don’t have to go along.<br />

• The bus driver starts calling you “ma’am,” instead of<br />

“hey, lady.”<br />

• It’s the doctor, not the police officer, who tells you to<br />

slow down.<br />

• If you’re driving a car, it qualifies <strong>for</strong> classic plates.<br />

• Your grandkids drive cars while you ride a bike.<br />

• Your high school yearbook is now home to three different<br />

species of mold.<br />

• You buy “age-defying” makeup and “anti-wrinkle”<br />

38 novEMBER 2009 www.aHDIonLInE.oRg


creams and believe they work.<br />

• You turn out the lights <strong>for</strong> economic reasons instead of<br />

romantic ones.<br />

• You remember when the cost of going to a movie was<br />

less than the cost of a stamp today.<br />

• You recognize Led Zeppelin songs that have been<br />

turned into elevator Muzak.<br />

• When you watch black-and-white fi lms, you point to<br />

the screen and say, “He’s dead. She’s dead. They’re dead.”<br />

• You’ve had three opportunities to buy every single<br />

Disney animated classic “<strong>for</strong> the last time in a<br />

generation.”<br />

• Your childhood toys turn up in antique malls with<br />

huge price tags on them.<br />

• You often try to change TV channels with your cordless<br />

phone.<br />

• You’d pay good money to be strip-searched.<br />

• Your hair starts turning from gray to black.<br />

• You choose your seat in the movie theater and the tour<br />

bus so that your good ear picks up the sound.<br />

• You’re wearing more gold in your mouth than on the<br />

rest of your body.<br />

• Going bra-less pulls all the wrinkles out of your face.<br />

• You take your thirteen-year-old grandchild to an<br />

amusement park, and her ticket costs more than yours.<br />

• You have a party, and the neighbors don’t even realize it.<br />

• Your wife quietly tells you she’s having an affair, and<br />

you ask if she’s having it catered.<br />

• When you stand in front of a mirror, you can see your<br />

rear end without turning around.<br />

• People send you this list (and you <strong>for</strong>get who they are). P<br />

*This column is adapted from Richard Lederer’s A Treasury<br />

<strong>for</strong> Seniors, to be published by Howard Books in July 2010.<br />

Richard Lederer is the author of more than 30 books about language,<br />

history, and humor, including his best-selling Anguished English<br />

series and his current book, Presidential Trivia. He has been profi<br />

led in magazines as diverse as The New Yorker, People, and the<br />

National Enquirer and frequently appears on radio as a commentator<br />

on language. Dr. Lederer’s syndicated column, “Looking at Language,”<br />

appears in newspapers and magazines throughout the United States.<br />

He has been named International Punster of the Year and Toastmasters<br />

International’s Golden Gavel winner.<br />

The time is now...<br />

will your program<br />

make the grade?<br />

voLUME 5 • ISSUE 6 novEMBER 2009<br />

39


Be<strong>for</strong>e.<br />

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terminology is of the utmost importance.<br />

This program gives this to you without<br />

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helping to increase your production.”<br />

–Amy Davis, MedQuist<br />

Go to: http://www.ahdionline.org/Bench<br />

markKBOnline/tabid/283/Default.aspx <strong>for</strong><br />

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In partnership with InterFix, AHDI has created the first<br />

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• Integration with all popular transcription and<br />

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• New terminology updates researched and added<br />

by AHDI every week!


2009 INDEX<br />

OF ARTICLES<br />

EDITORIAL<br />

An Ear <strong>for</strong> Detail, Lea Sims,<br />

January 2009, Page 1.<br />

Oh My Aching Back! Lea<br />

Sims, March 2009, Page 1.<br />

The Game Where<br />

Knowledge is Everything,<br />

Lea Sims, May 2009,<br />

Page 1.<br />

The Diacritic Discipline, Lea<br />

Sims, July 2009, Page 1.<br />

Working Your “Net,” Lea<br />

Sims, September 2009,<br />

Page 1.<br />

The <strong>Credentialing</strong> Dilemma,<br />

Lea Sims, November 2009,<br />

Page 1.<br />

PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE<br />

2009: The Next 30 Years,<br />

Susan Lucci, January 2009,<br />

Page 7.<br />

A New Day is Dawning,<br />

Susan Lucci, March 2009,<br />

Page 7.<br />

Evolving Our Careers With<br />

the EHR, Susan Lucci, May<br />

2009, Page 6.<br />

Working Smarter, Living<br />

Smarter, Susan Lucci, July<br />

2009, Page 7.<br />

The Critical Few or The<br />

Necessary Many, Susan<br />

Lucci, September 2009,<br />

Page 7.<br />

The Long and Winding<br />

Road, Susan Lucci,<br />

November 2009, Page 7.<br />

STUDENT SCENE<br />

Critical Thinking in<br />

Leadership: A Snapshot of<br />

the Leadership Institute<br />

Course, Kim Buchanan,<br />

January 2009, Page 9.<br />

Career Longevity: How to<br />

Survive in a Constantly<br />

Changing Environment,<br />

Sherry Doggett, March<br />

2009, Page 9.<br />

An Important Tool <strong>for</strong><br />

Success: Networking, Tanya<br />

Guenther, May 2009,<br />

Page 8.<br />

The RMT Exam: A System<br />

of Checks and Balances,<br />

Cassie Uber, July 2009,<br />

Page 9.<br />

The First Job Search—<br />

Setting Yourself Apart,<br />

Sue Krajewski, September<br />

2009, Page 9.<br />

Attention Students of<br />

ACCP-Approved Schools:<br />

RMT Success Awaits! Cassie<br />

Uber, November 2009,<br />

Page 11.<br />

FEATURES<br />

Interpreting DSL Dictation,<br />

Ellen Drake, January 2009,<br />

Page 12.<br />

The Power of One, Michelle<br />

LaBrosse, January 2009,<br />

Page 18.<br />

Ethics in the Workplace:<br />

What Does It Mean For The<br />

Medical Transcriptionist?<br />

Grace LaConte, January<br />

2009, Page 20.<br />

Healthy Eating, Janice<br />

Bader, March 2009,<br />

Page 12.<br />

Ergonomics…Universal<br />

or Unique? Lori DeVaney,<br />

March 2009, Page 16.<br />

Stress: The Good, The Bad,<br />

and The Ugly, Pati Howard,<br />

March 2009, Page 20.<br />

Share Your Wealth (of<br />

Experience), Barb Adler,<br />

May 2009, Page 10.<br />

Specialty Certification: A<br />

Smart Strategy <strong>for</strong> Career<br />

Advancement, Steven<br />

Lazarus, May 2009,<br />

Page 14.<br />

Medical Scribing: A “New”<br />

Use For Old Skills,<br />

Lisa Woodley, May 2009,<br />

Page 18.<br />

Recommendations to Make<br />

Windows XP Per<strong>for</strong>m Faster,<br />

Kirk Calabrese, May 2009,<br />

Page 20.<br />

Advanced “Mind Reading”<br />

and the Art of Editing,<br />

Susan Dooley, July 2009,<br />

Page 12.<br />

The Feedback Loop, Georgia<br />

Green, July 2009, Page 16.<br />

All You Have To Do Is Ask!<br />

Pati Howard, July 2009,<br />

Page 20.<br />

Diving into the Social<br />

Networking World, Lea<br />

Sims, September 2009,<br />

Page 12.<br />

Networking: The Power<br />

of Connecting, Shallee<br />

McArthur, September 2009,<br />

Page 16.<br />

<strong>Association</strong>s and Their<br />

Role in Today’s Economic<br />

Environment, Ava Marie<br />

George, September 2009,<br />

Page 20.<br />

Recipe <strong>for</strong> Credential<br />

Success: The “Secret Sauce,”<br />

Tammy Moore, November<br />

2009, Page 14.<br />

Continuing Education: A<br />

Commitment to Lifelong<br />

Learning, Kim Buchanan,<br />

November 2009, Page 18.<br />

GRASSROOTS<br />

Tips From Our Component<br />

<strong>Association</strong>s, Brenda Hurley,<br />

January 2009, Page 27.<br />

Balance is Important,<br />

Brenda Hurley, March<br />

2009, Page 38.<br />

World Famous Component<br />

<strong>Association</strong>s, Brenda Hurley,<br />

May 2009, Page 29.<br />

The Power of Listening,<br />

Brenda Hurley, July 2009,<br />

Page 27.<br />

Professional Networking,<br />

Confessions of an Addict!<br />

Brenda Hurley, September<br />

2009, Page 30.<br />

A Call To Action! Brenda<br />

Hurley, November 2009,<br />

Page 28.<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

41


COMPONENT SPOTLIGHT<br />

Connecting Your<br />

Component to National<br />

Initiatives, Bethany Twist,<br />

January 2009, Page 29.<br />

25 Years and Counting,<br />

Bethany Twist, March 2009,<br />

Page 39.<br />

A Career That Moves With<br />

You, Bethany Twist, May<br />

2009, Page 30.<br />

Innovative Strategies,<br />

Bethany Twist, July 2009,<br />

Page 29.<br />

Components on the Front<br />

Lines, Bethany Twist,<br />

September 2009, Page 33.<br />

Navigating a Path to<br />

Success, Sherry Martin,<br />

November 2009, Page 29.<br />

FUNNY BONE<br />

The Humor of Abraham<br />

Lincoln, Richard Lederer,<br />

January 2009, Page 40.<br />

More of the Humor of<br />

Abraham Lincoln, Richard<br />

Lederer, March 2009,<br />

Page 46.<br />

Arthur Conan Doyle and<br />

Sherlock Holmes, Richard<br />

Lederer, May 2009, Page 41.<br />

The Literary Lincoln,<br />

Richard Lederer, July 2009,<br />

Page 40.<br />

Getting Started, Richard<br />

Lederer, September 2009,<br />

Page 40.<br />

Signs That You’re Growing<br />

Old, Richard Lederer,<br />

November 2009, Page 38.<br />

42 noVemBeR 2009 www.aHDIonlIne.oRg


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continued on next page<br />

Volume 5 • Issue 6 noVemBeR 2009<br />

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43<br />

EMPLOYERS GUIDE


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44 noVemBeR 2009 www.aHDIonlIne.oRg<br />

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Be a part of the NEW<br />

Transcription Employers Guide.<br />

Our new <strong>for</strong>mat offers job-seekers easy<br />

comparison of benefits and features.<br />

For details or to place your company listing,<br />

please contact Jeff Rhodes at 410-584-1952<br />

or e-mail ahdi@networkmediapartners.com.<br />

Direct deposit<br />

Vacation/PTO<br />

QA program w/feedback<br />

SR editing opportunities<br />

Private practice/specialty work<br />

Acute care/hospital work

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