Radiology and English as a second language?

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demayette

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How difficult it is for someone whose english is its second language to practice radiology? I have seen these docs dictating these stuff in a "radio" and I believe it would be hard for the transcriber to imprint these stuff if the radiologist has an accent different from the american accent.
 
How difficult it is for someone whose english is its second language to practice radiology? I have seen these docs dictating these stuff in a "radio" and I believe it would be hard for the transcriber to imprint these stuff if the radiologist has an accent different from the american accent.

A few points:

- Most radiologists dictate into a system that has pre-set templates. So they're really only dictating a few specific words/phrases.

For the radiology dictation software, it is (I believe) actually voice recognition software. So it recognizes your voice, adjusting for your accent.

- Keep in mind that, even among radiologists for whom English is their native language, there is a huge variety in accents and pronounciation. Despite that, they all seem to manage just fine.

- All doctors dictate, not just radiologists. I am a non-radiologist, but I still dictate discharge summaries, admission H&Ps, etc. For that, it actually IS a question of transcription, so we are asked to speak slowly and to enunciate.

If you want to be a radiologist and English isn't your native language, you'll be fine. I've seen quite a few radiologists who spoke English with an accent, and they didn't seem to have major problems..
 
A few points:

- Most radiologists dictate into a system that has pre-set templates. So they're really only dictating a few specific words/phrases.

For the radiology dictation software, it is (I believe) actually voice recognition software. So it recognizes your voice, adjusting for your accent.

- Keep in mind that, even among radiologists for whom English is their native language, there is a huge variety in accents and pronounciation. Despite that, they all seem to manage just fine.

- All doctors dictate, not just radiologists. I am a non-radiologist, but I still dictate discharge summaries, admission H&Ps, etc. For that, it actually IS a question of transcription, so we are asked to speak slowly and to enunciate.

If you want to be a radiologist and English isn't your native language, you'll be fine. I've seen quite a few radiologists who spoke English with an accent, and they didn't seem to have major problems..

Although I have less experience than smq123 (as I'm a medical student who's only done a few rotations), I agree with the above. I have personally worked with three fellows from India that had no problems, although I must say that they had very good English (still had very thick accents). I wouldn't let this dissuade you from pursuing radiology as a career.
 
How difficult it is for someone whose english is its second language to practice radiology? I have seen these docs dictating these stuff in a "radio" and I believe it would be hard for the transcriber to imprint these stuff if the radiologist has an accent different from the american accent.

Im actually a transcriptionist for a large radiology group and rest assured your accent will be fine. We have several rads with massive accents and I simply get used to each radiologist and their different accents. If I have a major problem with a word, I just ask the radiologists or leave a blank in the report and they correct it when they approve their reports.
 
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