Medical dictation using speech-to-text software is one of the most effective ways to streamline clinical documentation. But until recently, if you wanted to dictate medical notes on your work computer or laptop, you needed to plug in a separate microphone. Technology is changing fast, and you might be wondering: should I use a smartphone app or dictaphone for medical dictation?
Dictaphones: the traditional way
Dictaphones have been valuable business tools for decades. Ten years ago, they were the only reliable way to dictate clinical notes or other professional recordings for later transcription.
With early dictaphones, a physician would record their dictation on the device, and a transcriptionist would listen to the recording and type the note. But as technology progressed, it became more common to automate transcription using AI-powered speech-to-text software.
If you dictated clinical notes in the past, you likely used a dictaphone, which looked like a TV remote and plugged into your computer with a USB cable. The dictaphone either recorded the note for asynchronous transcription or connected to a voice recognition software that transcribed it in real-time.
But today, there is an easier way. Most doctors already have a more powerful dictation machine in their pocket at all times: the smartphone.
Smartphones are an easy replacement for dictaphones
As recently as a few years ago, technology experts might have recommended a dictaphone over a smartphone app for medical dictation. They would have said that dictaphones have longer battery life, better sound quality, are easier to use, and have more features than a smartphone app.
But that’s no longer the reality. For example, consider these specs for modern smartphones like the iPhone 13 and the Samsung Galaxy S21:
- Battery Life: Both the iPhone 13 and the Galaxy S21 have batteries that last over 10 hours with active use. That’s plenty of time for a long shift at the hospital, even if you’re using your smartphone frequently.
- Sound Quality: Most doctors aren’t concerned about good quality as long as their recordings are audible. Still, smartphones have excellent sound quality that accurately capture your voice recordings, even in loud environments.
- Storage: New smartphones typically include at least 64GB of memory, with options for much more. That’s plenty of storage for thousands of hours of audio recordings. Besides, most medical dictation software now stores recordings directly in the cloud, making device storage a non-issue.
- User Interface: Smartphones are one of the most carefully designed consumer products and far more intuitive than any dictaphone. Besides, doctors are already comfortable using their smartphones for non-work purposes. That means transitioning to a smartphone dictation app typically requires no training or user manual.
- Features: All modern smartphones come with built-in speech-to-text capabilities (whether Google or Siri) and voice recording apps (Voice Memos in Apple and Voice Recorder in Android). And with hundreds of medical dictation apps on the market, there’s no limit to features available for dictation and transcription.
Benefits of medical dictation apps
As you probably see, modern smartphones come with all the technical requirements necessary to replace a traditional dictaphone. And with the right mobile dictation app, they offer a few obvious benefits.
Let’s use the example of Mobius Conveyor, one popular dictation software that works on Mac and PC.
Always with you
Your smartphone is always with you, which is probably not the case for a dictaphone. Whether you want to dictate into an app on your desktop or directly into the EMR from your smartphone, Conveyor makes it easy.
Apps like Mobius Conveyor also allow you to record voice memos to insert into the EMR at a later point. So if you change workstations, are working from home, or want to dictate clinical notes in the car, you don’t have to wait. Smartphones offer a convenient mobile dictation solution that never leaves your side.
Instant and accurate
Depending on your dictation and transcription workflow, using a dictaphone may create lag times before completing your clinical notes. Mobile medical dictation uses voice recognition software, so your words appear on the screen as you speak.
Apps like Mobius Conveyor use deep learning and neural net technology to provide the most accurate voice recognition software on the planet. Conveyor gets even better as you use it, and like most medical dictation apps, it understands medical terminology out of the box.
EMR integrated
Making medical dictation efficient requires integrating it carefully into your clinical documentation workflow.
Mobile apps like Mobius Conveyor connect directly to the EMR, so your dictation is instantly saved in the right place.
Should you use a smartphone app or dictaphone?
By now, the answer should be clear. Busy doctors looking for efficiency and simplicity will find that a mobile app on their smartphone is the easiest way to dictate clinical notes.
As hospitals integrate smartphones more thoroughly, healthcare will likely phase out dictaphones. But physicians don’t have to wait. If you’re looking for an easy way to dictate clinical notes on any computer, look no further than the smartphone in your pocket.
