Why become a CNA? Be a Medical assistant instead

Nursing Students CNA/MA

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This isn't a commercial but a warning.

Like most folks here, I decided to become a CNA to learn from the "ground up"," pay my dues", get in contact with healthcare professionals. It's the biggest mistake I've made in recent years.

Know why? CNA school doesnt really tell you what being a CNA is about. The private CNA school admission officers lie and gloss over the truth all the while collecting that exorbitant tuition. At a skilled nursing facility where 99% of you will start in, it's 80% changing diapers and making beds. It is a back-breaking, thankless, feces-collecting, low-paying scut job that you can master within months if not weeks or days. I should know. I have.

All those techniques of bedbathing, turning, grooming? Hah. Out the window. CNA school makes you think you have all the time in the world to attend to these patient needs. No way. You have an overloaded roster of patients and no time to talk, let alone groom them. You have your lead CNAs, your other residents and the nurses themselves yelling at you to attend to their needs. The first month, I was almost crippled for a week because my back was so aching and I had used proper body mechanics. These patients are so overweight, that turning them on the bed just to change their diaper is excruciating at times. CNA school didn't help with that problem among the other REAL situations that arise in LTC.

Being a CNA means you see the whiniest, neediest dark side of people. After I became one, I've heard one consistent caveat amongst nursing professionals, "You'll get burnt out and will start hating your patients." All true.

Another caveat? The nurses, whom you work with and are hoping to become one day, you eventually deeply resent. Why? CNAs do ALL the heavy lifting. If a resident vomits or ***** in his pants? Guess who the nurse immediately calls because she can't stomach it. You'll have three call lights to answer and the nurse is yelling at you on top of that to get her vitals done.

And for those hoping to get into a hospital? Good luck, because to basically get in you have to be a blood relative or really lucky. Especially if you have no experience. Those CNAs working at those hospitals are basically lifers doing the same thing over and over for years on end. Don't envy them too much.

Become a Medical assistant. You have more interaction with the doctors and nurses, higher variety of patients rather than just old people. No heavy lifting except for maybe transferring once in a long while. The pay is roughly the same, the schooling is longer though. Tuition is a little more but totally worth it. It also counts as healthcare experience which is key since my eventual goal is to get into physician assistant school. Barring that, then nursing school.

I came in like you all nursing hopefuls wanting to help people. It gets harder week by week to maintain that attitude but there are some bright spots like when one of my residents relatives pulled me aside to tell me that her mother loves me taking care of her. Yet, I can feel my attitude waning. I've been in for three months and it feels like years.

I'm doing you a favor here. Do yourself a favor and wave off becoming a CNA and be a MA. I wish I did. As for the tuition? There are public school options. I found one for $750, that teaches front and back office at local adult school here in California.

You have been warned.

No one hires Medical Assistants anymore. There are 3 girls in my CNA class who are med assistants, but have been working in that same field for over 10 years. They are in the class, because they now need to be state certified. That means CNA class. Also, phlebotemists can not get hired unless they have a CNA license.

Put down your clinicals for your experience. I know its not much, but hey its something!

Actually you're not supposed to put down your clinicals as part of your experience because it's included with the education section. What they mean by experience is "paid experience".

One Director of Nurses would say "Work Smarter not Harder."

:lol2: That phrase always made me laugh. I think it's a corporate/management phrase that really means, "I don't care how you do it, just shut up and do it." I actually laughed out loud once when our DON used it in a meeting.

Specializes in LTC.
:lol2: That phrase always made me laugh. I think it's a corporate/management phrase that really means, "I don't care how you do it, just shut up and do it."

lol! I can understand the phrase, because I've seen girls who don't "work smart" and day after day they can't get their work done. At the same time you're totally right about how management squeezes more unrealistic work on you and then turns around and blames the underlings when they don't do it.

I've also heard comments about CNAs working "too fast." My DON has said that "there's no reason the 3-11 CNAs have to rush around the get all their work done by 9:30." She thinks they just do it so they can sit around and be lazy the rest of the night. Um, hello? If you're still putting people to bed past 8:30 or so, then the residents are ******! Most of them want to jump into bed before they've even swallowed that last bite of supper. Not to mention the incontinent people that you didn't get to UNTIL 9:30 have now probably been sitting in the same position, untoileted, for around 6 hours. You know when someone gets a pressure sore one of the first things that happens is a lecture about peri care and repositioning and how those good-for-nothing CNAs aren't doing it!

Specializes in LTC, rehab medicine & therapies.
Actually you're not supposed to put down your clinicals as part of your experience because it's included with the education section. What they mean by experience is "paid experience".

When I was fresh out of training, I had a separate section on my resume for "Clinical Experience" and listed where I did my clinicals and what I did. I was told by the places I applied to that they liked knowing what my hands-on experiences had been - it gave them a baseline of what I had already done. After I got my first CNA job, I removed it from my resume.

WOW, I am surprised about NurseCubanitaRN2b not doing her research first off. the nickname of a CNA is a certified @%& wiper. But yet there are many options for a CNA that does not involve nursing home care. I work as a CNA on the medical-surgical specialties floor. I love it. It is completely different, but we still have the older generation. But I also enjoyed working at the nursing home even though the work was harder because of the daily contact with the same residents day in and day out. The geriatrics is growing and is not going away for a while. No matter what we do we will run in to a older person with dementia who needs a dirty brief changed. I think my experience at the nursing home have more compassion for the older generation.

The funny part, in my opinion, is I am also in the nursing program at our local community college working for my RN and we have 4 medical assistants in my class. All of the medical assistants say they first off make less then a CNA and second say they were lied to about many aspects of becoming a Medical assistant. And they are back in the classroom working to be a RN now.

just some food for thought

from a certified A@& wiper who loves helping others.

(i dont want to be the patient who has an aide who does not care about me.)

Specializes in LTC, Med/Surg.
why become a cna? Be a medical assistant instead

Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha!

I am a cna now who works in the hospital and i started out in a LTC getting paid 6.50 an hr. there were many days i cried and prayed because the work was so excrutiating.As soon as i made 6 months i quit and did not work as an aid for 2 yrs because i was so turned off.however i still had dreams of becoming a nurse and that is what i am doing now.im in nursing school and wouldn't trade any of my experience.everything comes together for me and i will understand how the cna feels.you are going to run into ungrateful,lazy nurses in the hospital that feel like all they are supposed to do is pass meds and chart anything else that can be delegated is pretty much what they are going to do. then there are nurses that make you remember why you want to be a nurse and rekindle your passion.i enjoy what i do as a CNA but it is time for me to move up and i encourage everyone who is experiencing stubbling blocks to continue to go around them or move them and press on

CNA is a certified @%& wiper.

Suit yourself

I would have to disagree. I believe being a nursing assistant is possibly the best experience one can have prior to being a nurse. I was an aide for 3 years prior to becoming a nurse. There were bad days, I will grant you that. There were times that I didn't think I would make it one more day. However for each one of those days, there were days where the residents made me smile and be glad that I was there. Theres nothing like it in the world then one of your patiens to be so happy that you are there to assist them. When they tell you, you are their angel. I am very happy that I paid my dues. I am a better nurse today because of it. There will always be nurses out there who will act as you describe but also for each one of those you will find ones who are more then willing to help out on the floor. As for the MA program, I find the ones who have finished their schooling are having difficulty in finding a postion. I say that being an aide is the right way to go, I also believe it should be mandatory. If you dont like being an aide, I doubt you will enjoy being a nurse. Good Luck with your path

wow, i am surprised about nursecubanitarn2b not doing her research first off.

huh? what are you talking about? what did i say on this thread?

When I did the Oregon CNA level II course, everyone that was in my class worked in some sort of SNF or long-term care facility. They, for the most part, did not enjoy their jobs, although some did. I completed the course and started working at a hospital as a CNA, and I LOVE what I do. I quit being an elementary school teacher to switch to nursing, and so far, being a CNA has solidified my desire to go to nursing school.

I've never gone home with a sore back, because my hospital provides all the lift, slide, and moving equipment and is always coaching us to use it. I never lift or turn patients without a coworker, and everyone works as a team. Some of the best poop cleaners I've seen are RNs that I work with that aren't afraid to get in there. So, I'm really sad to hear your experience was so bad, but I have to ask, why did you stay employed there so long if you hated it so much?

The notion that it's impossible to get a job at a hospital isn't true across the board. Maybe where you live. I had never worked as a CNA and got hired right after I finished the course work. And, I did not find that my instructors at the local community college misled me in anyway about the job.

So, I consider myself warned to not work where you did. Good luck with a better job! I hope you find something that makes you happy.

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