Important Note: These jobs are posted in real-time and might expire. Please apply promptly.
This week, it looks like there’s a steady demand for specialists in the medical transcription field, especially for those who are board-certified. We’ve also verified some solid remote opportunities, which continue to be a lifesaver for many, offering that much-needed flexibility.
This Week’s Jobs
Handling independent medical evaluations as a Board-Certified General Surgery Specialist. You’ll be diving deep into cases and working on detailed medical records. Company: Dane Street, LLC | Location: Bartow, WV Apply Here
If you’re an Orthopedic Surgeon interested in independent medical evaluations, there’s a role waiting for you in Atlanta. It’s all about reviewing cases and keeping those records in check. Company: Dane Street, LLC | Location: Atlanta, GA Apply Here
Another opportunity for an Orthopedic Surgeon, this time in Myrtle Beach. It’s a similar role focused on independent medical evaluations. Company: Dane Street, LLC | Location: Myrtle Beach, SC Apply Here
Dive into ENT cases as a Board-Certified Otolaryngology Specialist. This role involves extensive case reviews and transcription services. Company: Dane Street, LLC | Location: New City, NY Apply Here
Work From Anywhere (100% Verified)
Remote roles are abundant this week. If you’re looking for flexibility, these positions might just be the perfect fit.
Specialize in transcription quality control with a focus on secure file handling. Prior experience with industry-specific formats will come in handy. Company: Global Impact Group LLC | Location: Raleigh, NC Apply Here
Work from home as a Medical Transcriptionist. This position is open for both full-time and part-time applicants across the U.S. Company: Work At Home Job Source | Location: Panther, WV Apply Here
Join the team as a Remote Data Transcriptionist. Familiarity with transcription tools and the ability to work independently is crucial. Company: Watson Realty Corp. | Location: Tampa, FL Apply Here
If translation is your thing, work as a Freelance Hokkien Teochew Translator. This role spans diverse industries, including medical. Company: Elite Asia | Location: Kuala Lumpur Apply Here
Another chance to work remotely as a Medical Transcriptionist, available for full-time and part-time roles. Company: Work At Home Job Source | Location: Jamestown, RI Apply Here
Consider a position as a Remote Medical Transcriptionist with a focus on contract work. Flexibility in schedule is a plus here. Company: Work At Home Job Source | Location: Pelham, NH Apply Here
One thing that’s helped me jump on these: I keep TextExpander snippets per specialty so I can tweak my resume/cover and submit within 10–15 minutes when posts are “real-time” and might expire. With remote roles abundant, that speed has bumped my callbacks, but small caveat — if you’re board-certified, put that line right at the top so a screener sees it immediately.
, the “real-time” scramble is brutal — I keep a single PDF ready (RHDS/CMT proof, HIPAA cert, QA stats, 2–3 min sample) so I can “apply promptly” the second a remote post goes up. Small caveat on the board-certified bit: many listings mean RHDS/CMT preferred, not physician boards; AHDI clarifies it here: https://www.ahdionline.org/page/certification.
I put my QA % and shift availability in the email subject — callbacks jumped, but keep it under 8–10 words so it doesn’t get cut off. > the board-certified bit: many listings mean RHDS/CMT preferred, not physician boards; AHDI clarifies — agreed; I drop the AHDI link in my note to preempt questions: https://www.ahdionline.org.
@cbryant smart move tightening the pitch — I use a tiny AutoHotkey hotstring that drops my specialty lines, QA %, shift window, and a sample link so I can hit “apply promptly” in under a minute when a remote post pings. Caveat: some portals block pasting scripts, , so I keep the same blurb in a pinned Notion note to copy manually.
Quick tip that’s helped me: I use an RSS alert (Feedly → Push) for “medical transcription remote” so I’m applying within minutes, and I lead with a tiny line like “ready now: neurology/ortho, Infinity USB pedal, Word expander” — @brightharbor4591 your tight pitch idea made this hit harder. Small caveat: some portals mangle links or long intros, so keep it plaintext and short — think stethoscope-by-the-door short.