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As full-time jobs for one year? Would they accept you?
Generally as a scribe, you're interacting with the physician--he/she may dictate charts to you and you'll typically be in the room observing the history, exam, and any procedures so you can document the chart. Generally, there's little patient interaction--the value of this experience is observing and getting to understand what doctors do all day.Hmm but when you're scribing are you actually interacting with the patients or just writing down everything the doctor and the patients say and remaining quiet to not bother them?
PM me if you want one person's perspective on clinical research OP.
Been at it since June as my gap year job and so far I've loved it. Get to see patients nearly every day, do things like blood draws, EKGs, vitals, med history, lab work, interact with a variety of physicians, etc. It has vastly increased my understanding of how the various elements/institutions in healthcare interact and work together and I have had some fantastic conversations and experiences with patients too. I'm not saying there aren't downsides and negative spins that can be applied to clinical research, but my experience so far has been overwhelmingly positive.
Happy to go into more detail if anyone else is interested.
Generally as a scribe, you're interacting with the physician--he/she may dictate charts to you and you'll typically be in the room observing the history, exam, and any procedures so you can document the chart. Generally, there's little patient interaction--the value of this experience is observing and getting to understand what doctors do all day.
I've been working in clinical research for 3 years. Happy to talk to you about that, if you'd like! I've gotten a good amount of patient contact, built a close relationship with my PI, and also co-authored several publications. All in all, it's been pretty great! Scribing was good, too, but in a different way.
I'd love to hear more from both of you! Like OP, I'm trying to figure out my gap year (except I'll be taking 2). However, my main goal is research/publishing. I'm currently deciding between a Bioengineering Masters, being a research tech, and being a clinical research coordinator/associate. Clinical research honestly sounds like the best to me (because of all the things you've said above) IF I can publish during that time. What have your experiences been in general with clinical research and specifically with publishing? Also how are things like hours worked/week, on-the-job travel, etc. Thank you!
As full-time jobs for one year? Would they accept you?