Tag Archives: Dragon Training

Dragon Medical is Compatible with Most EMR Systems Today

Customers call just about every day to see if Dragon Medical will work with the EMR purchase they are considering.  That’s pretty amazing.

Our experience has shown that medical providers want to ensure Dragon Medical will work before buying an EMR.   This information is crucial, because doctors that have tried the latest Dragon Medical or spoken to other practices that have, know one thing to be true.

Speech-to-text; is the fastest way to capture the narrative sections within EMR systems.

Voice Automated has been working with Dragon Medical since the day it was first released.  Our sales staff, trainers and integrators, know how to best utilize Dragon Medical with your EMR.

Just in case you wanted to know, Dragon Medical already works with the EMR systems listed below:

  • A.I.med EMR
  • ABELMed EHR – EMR / PM
  • Abraxas EMR
  • Accel™
  • AdvantaChart™
  • Agastha Medical Records (EMR)
  • AllMeds EMR
  • Amazing Charts
  • ARIA™ Oncology Information System
  • BETTERHEALTH record™
  • Centricity®
  • ChartCare EMR
  • ChartEvolve
  • ChartLogic EMR
  • ChartMaker®
  • ChartWare®
  • Clinical Navigator
  • CureMD PRS®
  • CYRAMED™
  • DC Talk™
  • digiChart®
  • Doc-U-Chart ®
  • DoctorAssistant By
  • Doctors Choice EMR™ & Nurses Choice EMR™
  • DocuMed®
  • e-MDs Solution Series
  • e-Medsys™ Electronic Health Record
  • E-Record EMR
  • eClinicalWorks
  • EDIM
  • Electronic Patient Charts
  • eMedRec
  • EmpowER System™
  • EMR4DOCTORS
  • emr4MD
  • EMRWorks™
  • EndoSoft®
  • EpicCare Ambulatory EMR
  • Epitomax®
  • Evolution EMR™
  • EyeDoc® EMR
  • EZChart™
  • FreeMED
  • gCare™
  • GlaceEMR™
  • gloEMR
  • Harmony e/Notes EMR
  • HealthPort EMR V9.0
  • Health Probe Professional
  • Horizon Ambulatory Care™
  • iAchieve EHR
  • iDocLocker
  • InSync
  • InteliDOX®
  • Intelligent Medical Software
  • IO Practiceware
  • Janus Health
  • Life Record™ EMR
  • MD-Journal
  • MD-Navigator Clinical®
  • MD Advantage™
  • MDAware® 2.2
  • MDLAND Electronic Health Record and Practice Management Systems 8.0
    MDSyncEMR
  • MED3000 InteGreat EHR
  • Medamation™ MD
  • MedAppz iSuite
  • Medflow EMR
  • Medi-EMR
    MediTab
  • Medical and Practice Management (MPM)
  • MedicalNotes.com
  • Medical Practice Solutions
  • MedicsDocAssistant™
  • Medios EHR
  • Medscribbler™
  • MicroMD® EMR
  • MindLinc
  • mMD.net EHR
  • NetPractice EHR
  • Nightingale On-Demand
  • OfficeEMR™ 2008
  • OmniMD™ EMR
  • OncoEMR
  • ORIGIN
  • Patient Chart Manager
  • PBOmd
  • PeakPractice™
  • PerfectMed™ EHR
  • Phoenix Ortho
  • Physician Practice Documentation (PPD)
  • Power Chart
  • PowerSoftMD
  • Practical Medical Record™
  • Practice 2009
  • PracticeOrders
  • Practice Partner®
  • PracticeStudio.NET®
  • Practice Today
  • PRAXIS EMR V4.0
  • PrimeSuite® 2008
  • PrognoCIS™
  • ProgNote/MobileLink
  • Pronto
  • PsychNotesEMR
  • Pulse Patient Relationship Management (Pulse PRM)
  • Quick Notes EMR
  • Raintree
  • Rosch EMR-Allergy
  • SamNotes2000
  • ScriptSure
  • SmartEMR
  • SOAPware®
  • STIX EMR
  • Team Chart Concept
  • TexTalk Medical
  • The AMCIS Network By
  • The Chart!
    TheraManager™
  • Touch ED®
  • TransMed
  • Turbo-Doc EMR
  • Unifi-Med™
  • UroChart™ EMR
  • Valant EMR
  • VersaSuite 7.5
  • Visionary™ DREAM EHR 7.1
  • Waiting Room Solutions Practice Management System
  • WebChartEHR
  • Webchart EMR and MIE™ Minimally Invasive™ EMR
  • Wellsoft EDIS
  • workflowEHR™
  • WriteMD®
  • WritePad™ EMR Systems
  • XLEMR

This article was originally posted at http://dragonmedicalblog.voiceautomated.com/2011/02/dragon-medical-is-compatible-with-most.html

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2010 Tech Survey: Physicians Speak Out on Voice Recognition

Perhaps the issue of physicians using voice recognition software can best be portrayed by the location of the microphones of Dr. J. Scott Litton, Jr., and Dr. Simeon Schwartz.

Litton, a solo family medicine practitioner based in Virginia, wears his Bluetooth microphone constantly, ready to dictate into his EHR at the click of a button using voice recognition software and a tablet PC. Dr. Schwartz, an oncologist and president/CEO of Purchase, N.Y.-based Westmed Medical Group, can, on most days, locate his microphone under the desk in his office, an afterthought for a physician who finds no value in voice recognition at all and would rather communicate with his physician assistant.

NOT A POPULAR OPTION
According to our 2010 Physicians Practice Technology Survey, more of you are like Dr. Schwartz than Dr. Litton. Our results indicate that 78 percent of you are not using voice recognition software while 22 percent are following Dr. Litton’s lead in incorporating it into your daily practice.

Bruce Kleaveland, a Seattle-based health IT consultant, says he interprets the nearly 8 in 10 physicians not using voice recognition as generally tech-savvy, but choosing direct entry through an EHR template as a faster alternative to voice recognition.

“Also, generally, doctors are going to feel more comfortable using direct entry in front of a patient than they would be using voice recognition,” Kleaveland says. “I don’t think it is so much that they don’t want patients to hear it as much as it is if you are entering it directly [into an EHR], you have a little more discretion about the manner in which the data is entered.”

Kleaveland adds that there is also the element of knowing direct entry will work versus voice where there may be a need to correct the entry and when time management is crucial for getting through a busy day of appointments, direct entry may be preferred.

FINDING HIS VOICE
At Litton Family Medicine in Pennington Gap, Va., Litton greets patients adorned with the microphone and a tablet PC firmly in his grasp. Notes are entered directly into his EHR via the tablet and dictation is not done in front of the patient, Litton says, but rather after a visit as he walks down the hall to add some quick voice files to the patient’s record.

“It helps me to save time and be more efficient,” he says. “I’d advocate for [voice recognition] use. If you have an EHR, then that indicates [the physicians] are somewhat technologically savvy and they have embraced the change in our practice landscape in that computers and technology are very much going to be a big part of our day-to-day workings.”

Litton opened his practice after completing his post-grad medical education in family medicine in 2003, and integrated a voice recognition program online two years later. Besides getting his voice recognition program to account for a slight Southern accent, Litton says it took him very little time to train on the system and get up and running.

Of those survey respondents who said they were using voice recognition software, 56 percent said it took more than one day of training and 44 percent said it took one day or less. As for whether the software eliminated transcription costs, 52 percent said the technology generated some savings and 48 percent said they have stopped using a transcriptionist altogether.

NO ‘DRAMATIC CHANGE’ SEEN AHEAD
Like Litton, many physicians using voice recognition software are doing so as part of an EHR. But while that may be the case, Kleaveland says as EHR use will likely grow – thanks in part to federal incentives – he wouldn’t rush to predict microphones accompanying stethoscopes as standard physician attire.

“[Voice recognition use] may bump up a little bit or down a little bit, but I don’t see a dramatic change,” he says. “Part of the reason is that voice is a technology in of itself that needs to be mastered and managed. It is not a panacea. With EHR meaningful use, part of the objective is for doctors to capture data in more discreet fashions, which really lends itself to more of the point and click, checklist type of items.”

Of the 165 doctors working at New York’s Westmed Medical Group in primary care and 26 specialties, only six or seven use voice recognition software, according to Schwartz, who has practiced medicine for more than three decades. Westmed has used its EHR for nearly eight years.

Schwartz says his personal reasons for not using voice recognition have to do with two simple factors: the medical narrative and work flow.

First, he does not see the value in recording all of a patient’s explanation of symptoms, personal information, etc. Those aspects of the patient visit deserve full attention, but not full recording in a record, he says. So if most of his visits as an oncologist do not involve putting that information in the record, why use voice recognition over his own written determination of the next course of action?

“Think about the differences between the spoken word and the written word,” Schwartz says. “You consider the nuance of what you are writing. When you speak, you don’t consider that nuance, so I would rather have three or four well-formed, well-typed sentences …reflecting my anxiety and uncertainty about the diagnosis. The more the physician has clarity of thought, the easier it is to have a note that does not contain excess and is it therefore more likely to impart much more useful information.”

TECH WORKS, BUT ONLY FOR SOME
As for work flow, Schwartz simply cannot imagine outfitting every exam room with a microphone or computer terminal, but does concede it can work for some specialties. At Westmed, it words best for the radiologist, who sits at a single workstation “with a lot of horsepower,” according to Schwartz, dictating 100 reports a day where the nature of the report has some variation, but a lot of standardization, he adds.

“Voice recognition clearly works,” Schwartz says. “The more effort the physician puts into training it, the more effort the physician puts into standardizing their comments, the more the physician trains their voice to use it effectively, the more sedentary the physician is, the less varied the work they do, the more likely that it will be a home run for them….You can’t beat that, but that’s not what medicine is. I’m an oncologist and that is certainly not what an oncologist does.”

Schwartz is upfront about not being a big fan of EHRs either – they have become “disgusting,” he says in their permitting the cutting and pasting of other people’s notes into charts, and physicians “view them grudgingly,” he says.

All that aside, he agrees with our survey data when it comes to voice recognition software as favorable by some physicians and not a tool in the tool belt of others.

“I think for a small segment of physicians who are very motivated, who have certain styles of efficiency, this technology is excellent, but it will not become dominant,” he says.

Are you more Dr. Litton or Dr. Schwartz? Weigh in below with your thoughts.

Source: physicianspractice.com

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Remove Barriers to Legal Transcription with Dragon NaturallySpeaking Legal

Hello Readers,

Today, i would like to talk to you about Dragon voice recognition software for Legal practices.

Nuance Communications introduces Dragon NaturallySpeaking Legal Version 10 for legal professionals to work faster and in a more efficient way. Dragon Legal version is a powerful productivity tool that allows legal community to create contracts, dictate briefs, and draft court documents or email messages. The Legal edition comes with pre-configured legal vocabulary containing nearly 30,000 legal-specific terms and phrases, and automatically formats citations. Dragon NaturallySpeaking Legal adopted by thousands of legal professionals to increase productivity and reduce transcription costs.

With Dragon Naturally Speaking 10 Legal you can create custom commands to instantly build and format templates for contracts or other legal documents. Dragon Legal v10 is fully integrated into virtually any Windows-based application, including the Microsoft Office suite, Microsoft Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox and Corel WordPerfect. Dragon Legal suite enables legal professionals to save time on paperwork and can spend more time on professional legal tasks.

With Dragon Legal edition you can avail following benefits:

  • Legal version upto 99% accurate just as accurate as many manual transcribers.
  • Use Dragon Legal edition to reduce reliance on support staff.
  • Dragon Naturally Speaking Legal version increases productivity and simplify tasks.
  • Improved third-party correction features streamline the editing and correction process that cuts down turnaround time for legal documents.

  • Accelerates your daily tasks as it enables you to create and formal legal documents, billing information, e-mail, and many more – with the power of your voice.
  • It helps to address Americans with Section 508 requirements and Disabilities Act (ADA).
  • Allows promoting prompt, standardized reporting and documentation procedures.
  • Protects from debilitating repetitive stress injuries, and saves operational cost.

So you see here Dragon Version have not been just useful to Medical and professional but Legal industry too.

J.G.

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Dragon Training

Howdy folks,

I was thinking that every one is now aware about Dragon Naturally Speaking Software and what it can do. But i want to share why and how training is important to make the best use of Dragon Voice Recognition Software…

Often we find that only a part of the capabilities of the software applications being utilized by people and they don’t get proper return on their investment. The reason is that they go for self-training and don’t get benefits of all the features of the software application to help them increase accuracy. A peep into how much more we can achieve through maximum usage of all the features of software, we could discover improved ways of working with software that will improve effectiveness and overall productivity. Dragon  training helps a business enterprise to be on the cutting edge as in today’s world it becomes necessary to compete with the latest advancements in technology. Also Dragon software training keeps businesses and their employees from falling behind in new software programs and upgrades.

Dragon software training is equipped in an effective way so that you can effortlessly get to know about all the features of Dragon software and can apply what they have learned to their day-to-day needs.  For Dragon training you can find variety of effective solutions for customizing speech recognition software to suit your needs. Dragon Training includes online, in-house training and support for all Dragon Naturally Speaking solutions. Dragon on-site training is very useful as it is designed to deal with the specific issues each user face while using Dragon Naturally Speaking software. In one-on-one training, curriculum can be customized and delivered as per user training requirements. Also Dragon on site training is flexible and cost-effective option as it allows you to impart training to as many employees in an organization you like and don’t have to leave the office. In addition to this, one-on-one dragon training allows employees to have consistent learning experience and can share knowledge.

Dragon online training and e-learning are providing more and more organizations with the opportunity to train their employees in Dragon Naturally Speaking software more effectively, efficiently and cost effectively in today’s competitive market. Dragon e-learning based program allows organization to train their employees in an interactive manner and provides flexibility that is required in today’s rapidly growing workforce. Online Dragon training allows employees to learn at their own pace and can repeat areas that they find difficult to understand.

Thats why people say to use a tool properly proper instruction are required.

I hope this help.

J.G.

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