Why become a CNA? Be a Medical assistant instead

Nursing Students CNA/MA

Published

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.

Specializes in Transitional Nursing.

I see this an an ancient thread, so I won't go off like I was going to.

Being a CNA is not for everyone, and certainly is hard work. I am both a CNA and a CMA and I much prefer taking care of 8-10 patients in a LTC or hospital setting and learning an abundance of things that, to me, are invaluable. I would not like putting patients in rooms, writing down their complaints and taking vitals all day. No thanks.

Specializes in Acute Rehab, IMCU, ED, med-surg.

Even if your goals don't include nursing school, being a CNA is an excellent way to get your foot in the door and be considered for other opportunities. Some of my former CNA coworkers have gone on to become surgical techs, positions that pay much more than CNA positions, yet do not require the time and money commitment of nursing school.

OP paints a pretty bleak picture of CNA work. Maybe I worked as a CNA at the wrong places (LTC, acute care hospital and LTAC), but I always experienced a setting where CNAs were valued as professionals, and worked side-by-side with nurses to care for patients, including the cleanups!

CNA school should not be costly. There are private vocational schools out there that charge the same or less than community college programs. In some areas, employers host their own CNA courses for new hires, or at a reduced cost for prospective hires. Cost range is $0 to $1200 in my area. I don't know what an MA course costs, but I have heard it costs almost as much as an LPN/LVN program.

Proud former CNA, current RN, and mother of an up-and-coming CNA! :up:

I guess everyone has different experiences. I like hearing both sides of being a CNA.

I'm majoring for a bachelors in nursing and I thought the same thing too, about learning the basics and so on and I now have a CNA license, still in school (not nursing school yet) and after my first job experience I regret spending money on becoming a CNA. I have no problem with body fluids/excretions but the heavy lifting was the reason why I quit my first job after a few days. I was told by other CNA students and coworkers that it wasn't going to be easy. It is true that what they teach u in CNA school you won't do it in real life. You have to improvise, etc. I really thought I can be a CNA because I'm young (20 yrs old) and have energy, but it's the complete opposite. They all warned me to not become a CNA because I'm too young to mess up my back. And it's too late now, I already paid for the classes and just to end up quitting my first job and looking for another job. But if weren't for the heavy lifting part, I would have definitely stayed. I only applied to 3 nursing facilities and they all wanted me to work full time. I just think everyone should be aware that heavy lifting is part of being a CNA and I think they should pay more for the job, even if you're inexperienced because this isn't just any job.

Specializes in Med-Surg/urology.
I guess everyone has different experiences. I like hearing both sides of being a CNA.

I'm majoring for a bachelors in nursing and I thought the same thing too, about learning the basics and so on and I now have a CNA license, still in school (not nursing school yet) and after my first job experience I regret spending money on becoming a CNA. I have no problem with body fluids/excretions but the heavy lifting was the reason why I quit my first job after a few days. I was told by other CNA students and coworkers that it wasn't going to be easy. It is true that what they teach u in CNA school you won't do it in real life. You have to improvise, etc. I really thought I can be a CNA because I'm young (20 yrs old) and have energy, but it's the complete opposite. They all warned me to not become a CNA because I'm too young to mess up my back. And it's too late now, I already paid for the classes and just to end up quitting my first job and looking for another job. But if weren't for the heavy lifting part, I would have definitely stayed. I only applied to 3 nursing facilities and they all wanted me to work full time. I just think everyone should be aware that heavy lifting is part of being a CNA and I think they should pay more for the job, even if you're inexperienced because this isn't just any job.

I'm just warning you now- don't think that the heavy lifting will stop once you become a nurse. I bathe, I perform peri care and I help the techs that I work with turn & re-position patients. I always encourage the techs I work with to never attempt turning and re-positioning on their own. I work day shift on a busy med-surg floor and we often have help from the physical therapists, but the lifting still can put a strain on your body.

I found this topic to be very interesting because I feel the total opposite.. I am a certified medical assistant and I have been working in a ambulatory clinic inside a hospital for 2 years. I am also a certified home health aide. As mush as I loved the patient care as an aide, I was doing too much traveling going from home to home. I decided to get my MA certificate and work at a hospital. I don't regret it per se, but if I could go back I wouldn't of done it. It cost me almost $18,000 to go to MA school (I live in the Boston area) and the job I work at, I barely get any patient care, except rooming them and taking their vitals, and a lot of secretary stuff, (scheduling, calling, etc). So I am not doing what I love to do, to be actually caring for patients and I am using none of the skills I learned in MA school, which has kept me from being hired at other jobs because I didn't have experience drawing blood and giving injections. I am going to school and finishing up my pre requesites to enter nursing school in Jan 2015. I recently applied for a nursing assistant job in the same hospital I work at but on the inpatient unit and I am praying to get it because I cannot stand being an MA anymore. Rooming patients and getting their vitals one after another just makes me feel like a robot and I am not learning anything new. I am dying to work in the inpatient and actually care for patients and spend time with them. So for me, the MA route was not the best one!

Specializes in ICU Stepdown.

There are local STNA classes where I am from and the classes are $500 max...Going to school and paying actual tuition just to become an STNA/CNA is pointless, but if an organization offers the $500 class on evenings or weekends why not do it? I'm sure it has the possibility to get your foot in the door. A lot of the time, to get a hospital job it takes experience, whether you have a BSN or not. Being an STNA/CNA probably isn't the best job to view as a career but gaining valuable experience and making money while doing it, as opposed to volunteering, isn't a bad idea especially if you're en route to getting a higher education.

You are so right. I have been a CNA for 9.5 years and I think I have been burnt out for quite a while now. I have always worked in LTC facilities and there is barely enough time to get the required work accomplished let alone anything else that needs done. It truly is very hard work and very much thankless. Someone commented saying it feels like a human assembly line and that is what I have always said and thought to myself. Not only are the patients being rushed because of the CNAs time restraints but the CNA is also rushed meaning the quality of care drops significantly and not only does the patient feel like just a number on my to do list, but the CNA feels like a slave to the job, being rushed to finish the duties and feeling like being worked to death, like as if our bodies are made of iron. My mantra has ended up becoming, " I'm not a machine, I'm a human being".

I love caring for people and it makes me feel good when I can make a difference in their lives or recovery. But it is no longer enjoyable to me at least not in the LTC setting because the turnover rate is so bad, there is never enough staff but yet the same amount of work is expected to be done which means I get to come home almost in tears because my back and body ache so bad, even lying down in bed isn't always initially comfortable until my muscles can relax for a bit. The overtime is good but you have to kill yourself to earn that extra money. I dread everyday I have to go in to work. Only because I don't know if I will leave in pain from being short staffed and pushed to the max or if I'm gonna have a good day and go home happy (doesn't happen often).

It's true, my normal 12 hour shift is mainly diaper changes, transfers, passing out meals and feeding, changing bed linens, making beds, and actually having to lift and maneuver the equipment including the wheelchairs and shower chairs with the patients in them even. As much as I love helping people, it is a back breaking job and I am doing everything I can to get out asap! It kills me that it took me this long to figure it out that I didn't wanna do this work anymore. My family worries about me because they know I am a hard worker and I push myself too hard. I have to live with this body for the rest of my life and if I hurt myself now, then what will I do? It will do me no good considering I am still in my 20's. Maybe other settings are better to work as a CNA but no matter where you go, it is still aide work.

I came on this site to hopefully get some insight into what it's like to be a medical assistant for starters or maybe other jobs in healthcare. I have thought of becoming a nurse but I am not sure I even wanna do that anymore if it is anything like being a CNA. Anyone with any advice or can tell me anything at all about being a CMA and what a typical day looks like as one, I would love to hear from you, and even though this is a nursing site, this is the only site I could find on the internet that I could hear from others their experiences.

Thanks!

I worked one job as a CNA on a Cardiac step down unit. It's there where I really learned I wanted to be a nurse. I worked with mostly amazing nurses who showed me skills and helped me with my pre-reqs.

Yes there are ****** nurses out there, and lazy lazy CNAs, the work can be rough sometimes but obviously you had to have realized that poop, puke and grunt work was in the job description. It's not easy I know that.

It's what you take away from it, and how you make your experience. If it was sooooo bad where you worked, maybe you should have looked elsewhere. Not all places are that bad.

maybe if you work at a nursing home..but i personally am not having this experience. i work at a very large hospital in the city, 12 hour shifts..and i love it! i dont really do any turning, they have "turn teams", which consist of a nurse and either a transporter or an aide that is used solely for turning..i have at most 9-10 patients, on a bad night..usually i have 6-7. the nurses treat the aides very well, on the whole. i dont really change any diapers, because most of the people are continent, but sometimes i do. the nurses do too though. i honestly spend a lot of my time charting and getting snacks for patients, or running to the pharmacy or lab. the rest of the time, i kick back in our very well appointed lounge area and talk with the other staff, or run down to the cafeteria and grab something to eat. dont get me wrong, there are very busy times, but overall its a pretty good work experience. it might be because im with an agency, but i dont think so..everyone seems very happy here. that said, working in nursing homes WILL burn you out, and i would never do it again, because that is pretty much how it is..i worked for another agency last year, and they sent me to a nursing home..they had me caring for 20 people by myself, lifting, changing, turning, for a whole 11 bucks an hour! no thank you!

maybe if you work at a nursing home..but i personally am not having this experience. i work at a very large hospital in the city, 12 hour shifts..and i love it! i dont really do any turning, they have "turn teams", which consist of a nurse and either a transporter or an aide that is used solely for turning..i have at most 9-10 patients, on a bad night..usually i have 6-7. the nurses treat the aides very well, on the whole. i dont really change any diapers, because most of the people are continent, but sometimes i do. the nurses do too though. i honestly spend a lot of my time charting and getting snacks for patients, or running to the pharmacy or lab. the rest of the time, i kick back in our very well appointed lounge area and talk with the other staff, or run down to the cafeteria and grab something to eat. dont get me wrong, there are very busy times, but overall its a pretty good work experience. it might be because im with an agency, but i dont think so..everyone seems very happy here. that said, working in nursing homes WILL burn you out, and i would never do it again, because that is pretty much how it is..i worked for another agency last year, and they sent me to a nursing home..they had me caring for 20 people by myself, lifting, changing, turning, for a whole 11 bucks an hour! no thank you!

Exactly! LTC is is ridiculous. But I have seen some people who love it and really do well there.

Exactly! LTC is is ridiculous. But I have seen some people who love it and really do well there.

yeah..i think at one point, i had that sort of dedication and shiny outlook, but not any more. its a pretty dismal work environment.

I know this is an older thread, but I'm about to finish with my associates in medical assisting/xray Tech, I recently started looking at job openings and have actually seen a lot.

+ Add a Comment