I was thinking about taking a CNA class and giving this another shot. A few years ago, I worked in two different nursing homes (one on 1st shift and one on 2nd shift). Both were terribly under-staffed and, for the life of me, I couldn't figure out how to take care of 10-15 patients in 2-3 hours and still manage to give them the quality of care that they deserve. I didn't want to do what the other CNAs did, taking shortcuts and such. Needless to say, I didn't last.
I really want to go to NS and nursing homes/hospitals tend to work with your school schedule and usually offer some kind of tuition assistance (right now, I work an extremely inflexible position, where I'll have NO choice but to leave in order to chase my dreams...), but I also don't want to put myself back into this kind of environment.
So, for all the CNAs, here are my questions...
1. How do you finish your am/pm care w/o taking shortcuts when you have 10-15 residents/patients to take care of in 2-3 hours. Is it possible? Everyone used to tell me no more than 15 minutes per room... How do you manage that one when you're doing total care?
2. Has anyone worked for the UPMC system in PA? How are they with CNA:resident ratios?
3. Are there any "branches" of healthcare for CNAs that allow you more time for your residents/patients OR that have residents/patients that are slightly more self-sufficient? I was thinking, maybe, home health or rehab...
Any advice/input would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
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