Is it woth adding phlebotomy or emt to cna

U.S.A. Kentucky

Published

I have finished my CNA program and will be starting LPN program in either August or Janurary. I want to be as well rounded financally as possible. Would it be worth it to add phlebotomy or EMT traing to my skills or not?:uhoh3:

Specializes in Med/Surge, Psych, LTC, Home Health.

I am really inclined to say no. For one thing, there are so many different opportunities out there for nurses, both LPN and RN, so much job security... you don't really need all of that extra training to have financial/job security, you know?

I mean, if you have the time, and just want to learn those things for fun... or if you want to work part time as an LPN and also part time somewhere else as an EMT... if you want to be a medical "jack of all trades" if you will... sure, why not? I just don't think it's necessary or particularly practical.

I figured that would be the case. I will probably not get into the fall LPN class and will have to wait until Janurary to start. I don't want to get training and not be able to use all the training. Such as, cna and phlebotomy I guess they really don't coinside with each other. It would not help with getting any better of a job is what I am getting at.

i am a certified phlebotomist through meddtexx. i renewed my certification for, i think, $45.00 when i had been certified for a year and was about to expire. know this - i never stuck anybody! yet, on paper, i am most certainly certified and have the documentation to prove it.

i am a nursing student, and thought being a cert. phleb. would improve my hire-ability (is that a word?) if i couldn't get a pca job. catch 22 - they (labone, and another place that begins with a q that i can't remember the name of offhand) won't hire you unless you have experience, and you can't get the experience unless you get the job. but meddtexx certainly has my money. they provide an 8 hour training class & you stick your partner twice. you are then considered certified. if you get a job somewhere where they want you to get the training, please say yes; otherwise, *in my opinion* this is really something you don't specifically need. i put it on my resume; i don't think it tips the scales for me.

How is t that they can they give you a cert. in one day when other classes are much longer than a day?

this is not an advertisement for medtexx medical corporation, phone number 1-800-844-2921, e-mail [email protected].

this is a response to the question from nasaodds.

the class is 8 hours; you read their book, practice a little, & they mail you a certificate. getting your sticks is up to you. in cincinnati, there *used* to be a few vocational programs (through great oaks? if i am remembering correctly - might be wrong) that provided a several month long program, but that was because it was a co-op. (they got their sticks!) i stuck people in my role transition, and i still want to do iv therapy. (i'm *older* and my knees won't hold out forever!)

if you still decide you want to be a phlebotomist, best of luck to you! at st. luke west (ky) i saw "20-somethings" that would go around on the floors drawing blood; that was their job. they had t-shirts and everything. from the outside looking in, it looked like a fun, relaxed job. if the patient was really impossible, i presume they had a doctor insert a picc line.

My daughter going to college for nursing she has the cna( certified) guess what she cant find a job everyone ask for at least 6 months experience now going to school hasnt helped her. She cant get experience if no one hires her i am so worried for her she is working going to school and was working retail but she needed to find a job as cna so she wouldnt lose her state certification. She is in hot creek can anyone tell me any one is hiring with no experience and yes she done her clinical at a nursing home and done real well there.

Ohhhh forgot she is going school for nursing plus a single mom i am just a worried mom

The way that I got started was through a nursing home. It offered a 3 week class from 9-5PM. The deal was that once I finished the training, I could work at the nursing home while I waited to get certified. It didn't cost me anything except for the deposit on the book, which I got refunded for when I finished the program. The place has now closed but I am grateful to have gotten the opportunity.

I got a job at UK hospital straight out of CNA class. I passed the exam and got hired at UK a month later. The only reason I mention where I work is that they are paying me and paying for me to attend a phlebotomy class this week. If your daughter gets a job at a hospital that requires their CNAs to draw labs, then the hospital will pay for it which will save her some $$. Just a thought.

P.S. a lot of my friends that are CNAs at work also started right out of the class working at the hospital, no 6 months required.

+ Add a Comment