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It's more than just "typical". It's an industry reality. That's like saying I'm smart and argumentative and would be a good lawyer, and then proceed to open a law office without going to school or getting any training.
Just so I understand your point, let me clarify what you are saying.... you are working as a full-blown acute care medical transcriptionist from home without any medical transcription training?? Are you able to work on your own doing hospital acute care work from a variety of hospitals with different procedures, without any assistance at home or anyone to "listen" for you when you got stuck, or are you only able to transcribe dictation from the physician(s) associated with the facility you work for? Would you be able to get a job that pays by the line and make any money? Would you be able to pass the transcription tests that are required by the national companies you would have to work for if you worked at home? Do you have the knowledge and experience that is required to even apply for those jobs, and if so, could you actually DO them?
Here... check out these jobs, read their requirements, then go to their websites and take their tests.
http://www.mtjobs.com/job_list.php?trac=1&pagenum=1 (If you don't have the required experience, you may not even be allowed to take their test.)
That's where the work-at-home transcription jobs are. Read the requirements... do you see any that don't require some experience under your belt?
We are trying to keep the OP from getting her hopes up to do something that just is not a viable option for someone with NO medical transcription training thinking they can dive right into it on maternity leave and make $500 a month (can't be done). I think she has enough on her mind with her mother being ill than trying to swim upstream in an industry that really isn't holding water anymore, even for those of us who have been in it our whole lives.
The OP is looking for one of these kinds of jobs listed at mtjobs.com, thinking that with no experience she can just dive into being a medical transcriptionist one day because she's been misled by ads to think it's easy money (AIN'T NOTHING EASY ABOUT ACUTE CARE TRANSCRIPTION). She thinks she can just jump into transcription (as many are misled into believing), and in this industry, the reality is that it can't happen. Perhaps "someone around there" will hire her, but she's not looking for a job outside the house where someone is going to work with her and help her learn to transcribe the doctors affiliated with only THEIR company/clinic/facility. She's looking for something she can do at home, without any prior experience or training, and make some fast money doing it because misleading transcription ads have led her to believe she can.
Even with all my experience, I'm making the same salary now I was getting in 1994 because the salaries have just tanked in our industry in the last 5-10 years, due to much of our work being outsourced overseas to transcriptionists in India for 3 to 4 cents a line.
Having experience in the medical fields is directly translatable into other medical jobs, but transcription is a whoooooole other beast unto itself. If you are doing full-blown acute care transcription on your own without any prior medical transcription training at all, then you are a genius who should be doing something way more important than medical transcription.
Edited for typos.