Your dentist spends time each day typing clinical notes. A remote VA can transcribe instead, freeing that time for clinical work. Here’s how it works.

Clinical notes are non-negotiable. They’re legally required. But typing them is slow and keeps your dentist away from the work that actually requires their expertise.

How Transcription Works

  1. Dentist finishes the appointment
  2. Dictates a summary into a recorder (phone or dedicated device)
  3. Audio is sent to the VA (encrypted, HIPAA-compliant)
  4. VA transcribes within 24 hours
  5. Transcription appears in the patient chart in your PMS
  6. Dentist reviews and approves (typically takes 2 minutes)

Time Savings

Typing notes manually takes 3–5 minutes per patient. With a busy schedule, that adds up to 30–50 minutes per day of non-clinical time.

With VA transcription:

  • Dictation: 2 minutes (voice is faster than typing)
    • Review: 2 minutes
    • Total: 4 minutes per patient

That’s 20–30 minutes per day freed for clinical work. For a dentist, that time has real value: more patient appointments, less end-of-day burnout, or simply more room in the schedule to give each patient the time they deserve.

Quality and Compliance

A transcription VA working in dental should:

  • Know dental terminology (procedure codes, anatomy, common abbreviations)
    • Maintain HIPAA compliance (encrypted files, secure transfer protocol)
    • Proofread for accuracy before returning the transcription
    • Flag unclear audio immediately rather than guessing

Cost


A full-time Reach VA costs $1,995/month, nearly $23,000 per year less than a second in-house hire at the national all-in average of $3,840/month. Transcription can be one

component of a broader admin VA role, or a dedicated specialization depending on practice volume.

FAQ

Q: Is voice-to-text software enough? A: Voice-to-text handles general transcription reasonably well but struggles with dental-specific terminology: procedure codes, anatomy terms, material names. Human transcription catches what automated tools miss.

Q: What if my dictation is unclear? A: A well-trained transcription VA flags it immediately: “I couldn’t understand this portion. Can you clarify?” You provide a quick clarification and move on.

Q: Can the VA see patient information? A: Yes, with HIPAA compliance in place: a signed BAA and secure transfer protocol. Same standard that applies to any in-house team member with access to patient records.