MT India Newsletter Archives and Subscription @: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MTIndia 28 Jun 2003
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Tackling the offshore outsourcing backlash (II)
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Dear Friends,
I am posting a mail I received regarding this:
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Dear Amit:
I must reply to some of those individuals who seem to think that the MT business is the "Miracle" for making money. If there is any money to be made in this industry it will only be those who are at the top and often they have to take cuts as well.
There are no "short-cuts" in training and often some individuals believe that all they need is to purchase the SUM Training Program or some other fastpace program and they will be "in the money". The reality is that the medical transcription business is a hard business and competition is at it's highest. There are no short cuts and certainly no fast track to wealth.
I have been in this industry for over 30 years and have seen many MTs companies come and go or be gobbled up by a large service to keep out competition at a lower price.
The "Hot Steam" to train offshore MTs is still questionable. Many MTs in the U.S. are without jobs and this can only hurt the
industry overall. IF the offshore mpanies, with U.S. based offices continue, I am certain that our U.S. Senators and U.S.
Representatives will get a stream of hot letters and phone calls. Then things will change.
As always we in the U.S. have not learned to fix our problems where the problem exists. Offshore transcription is being done to cut costs to the service owner, but the service owner is still making the money and the MTs are being shortchanged, especially here in the U.S. Many of us who have been in this industry for years and
years and have helped to grow the industry are now without employment ourselves. If this continues at the rate it is going,
you can be assured that the U.S. MTs will rise up and go straight
to Washington, D.C.
I know that we are in a global economy but the fact remains there are many MTs in the U.S. who are out of work and if they are
working they are still being paid wages that they were paid 10 years ago.
We have Indians who have come to the U.S. and make their homes here as well as some become U.S. Citizens. They go into business here in this country only to turn around and send the work back to India. Well there is a saying here in this country and that is "Don't bite the hand that feeds you".
Having been to India on three separate occasions to train MTs, I am well aware of the brilliant minds and the adeptness to medical transcription. It also offers an avenue to bring living standards up to many of your citizens. However, when U.S. highly skilled and trained MTs are without positions or jobs something has to be done
to alter the scales. I believe that there is room for all and there is a "middle ground", unfortunately for the U.S. MTs, BIG
BUSINESS took a look at the revenues and decided that this was the industry to get into. I have never believed that the revenues that have been bantered about are real and that they are highly inflated.
I am not against India's business of medical transcription but I am against U.S. MTs losing their jobs and perhaps it's time for all of us in the U.S. to stand up and be counted.
Stella J. Olson, CMT, FAAMT
U.S.,A.
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Do make time to email your views. I can understand the problem, but
I am missing the solution...
Cheers!
Maj (Dr.) Amit Chatterjee, SM
Strategist / Founder ~ mailto:amit@mtindia.org
MT India ~ www.mtindia.org
"The Community of MT Professionals"
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NEWS AND VIEWS :
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1) Medical Transcription Centers get service tax exemption
The Finance Ministry has said that the eight per cent tax on new services announced in the 2003-04 Union Budget would be effective July 1, 2003 even as it clarified that services provided by call
centres (i.e. commercial concerns which provides assistance, help or information, through telephone, on behalf of another person) and medical transcription centers (i.e. commercial concerns which
transcribe medical history, treatment, medical observations and the like) will be `fully exempted' from the eight per cent levy.
http://in.biz.yahoo.com/030621/77/25cdl.html
2) Vajpayee's pouts Indian IT strength at Shanghai
Apart from on-site software development, Indian companies have ventured into IT-enabled services such as call centres, medical transcription, data digitisation, legal databases and animation. More than 500 portals are being launched in India every month.
The Prime Minister told the gathering of Chinese IT businessmen,that China, one of the world leaders in computer hardware, could benefit from the Indian success in the software industry. "In combination, rather than in competition, Indian and Chinese IT industries can be a potent force," he said.
http://in.news.yahoo.com/030626/58/25gxj.html
3) Unravelling information & communications technology
Enter the ICT department. Thanks to their expertise - and the services of a company called DictaScribe - consultants are able to
dictate letters into a digital recorder and send their words via computer to be transcribed in (believe it or not) India and New Zealand.
One of the team of staff employed by DictaScribe in those two countries listens to the dictation and types the letters on screen. The transcriptions are returned via e-mail within 24 hours, ready to be printed out, checked for accuracy and signed.
The system is currently used by six consultants and a nurse in the GOSH Clinical Genetics department, where difficulties in recruiting medical secretaries had been causing long administrative delays. "We've been doing it for about six month's," explains Dr Elisabeth Rosser, Consultant and Lead Clinician in the department and an
enthusiastic advocate of the arrangement. "The accuracy is superb
and the turnaround time is excellent," she says. The ICT department worked with the NHS Information Authority to ensure that the systemprotects patient confidentiality.
Dr Rosser stresses that there remains a role for medical secretaries in hospitals even under a system like that operated by
DictaScribe. "Instead of spending 60 to 70 per cent of their time typing, they can spend time on filing, pulling patient notes and preparing clinics," she says.
DictaScribe says any accusation that it is exploiting workers in India is misplaced. "In India, medical transcription is regarded as a first-rate career and is greatly sought after. Many transcribers
are graduates and all are highly trained in medical transcription,"the company says.
http://www.ich.ucl.ac.uk/roundabout/2003/april/ict.html
4) IFC makes additional investment in Spryance
The International Finance Corporation (IFC), the private sector development arm of the World Bank Group, will invest up to US$1 million in an existing portfolio company, Spryance, Inc., a provider of outsourced medical transcription services in India. This investment follows a previous equity investment of $2 million
in Spryance, Inc. by IFC in November 2000.
IFC's investment will help Spryance build additional capacity in India and continue to develop its technology platform. Spryance's innovative business model allows its team of medical transcriptionists (MTs) to work remotely out of their homes.
Through the company's technology platform, MTs can efficiently interface with customers and the company to provide a 24 hour turnaround time.
http://lnweb18.worldbank.org/ict/resources.nsf/InfoResources/A77B26
9E4131A94C85256C830052CAB2
5) IT centers to boost jobs in North East
The department for Development of North Eastern Region (DONER) has planned to set up training centers for information
technology-enabled services in all states of the region.
DONER has identified the fact that the "English-speaking ability of
the youths from the region could be meaningfully utilised in services related to information technology like call centers and medical transcription where fluency in speaking and understanding the language is essential".
The courses, which will be offered at a subsidised rate of Rs 3,000 per student, will be spread over eight weeks. The modules comprise both classroom and laboratory sessions. A recent study by the
NASSCOM has shown a severe manpower shortage in the sector.
http://in.news.yahoo.com/030626/58/25gwl.html
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The MTIndia Team