The first physical exam had 30 or more findings and none of them were normal, just another day in the ER. On my first day alone I arrived exactly on time, at some ERs that is 15 minutes early, and printed out the physician’s physical exam normals. If you have more questions about ScribeAmerica’s training visit their FAQs training page. When I went home from that shift, I felt like a real scribe and I knew that this job–which was a stepping stone to being a health care provider–was what I wanted to do. On the fourth day, my trainer left 4 hours early from the 12 hour shift and I did not have a single question that the physician could not answer. On the rest of the training shifts, it was a gradual shift from the trainer doing mostly everything and me simply writing notes, to me entering the data and using the trainer as a reference guide to scribing. At the end of the first shift, the trainer said that I seemed very interested in the position, and wrote what to work on in my training manual. I was amazed after witnessing my trainer’s speed and competence and hoped that one day I would reach that level. While I was writing, the physician started doing the physical exam and the trainer was already finished with typing the HPI and entering the pertinent symptoms in the ROS. ![]() When we walked into the first patient’s room, I held my clipboard loosely and starting jotting down what the patient was saying.
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