Do most hospitals require EKG/ Phlebotomy certtification?

Nursing Students Technicians

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I've just enrolled in a CNA program in NY and have completed my first week. My ultimate goal is to work in a hospital as a patient care technician and the same school that is offering the CNA course has a combined EKG/Phlebotomy certificate as well. Seeing that my objective is to work in a hospital setting, should I bother spending extra money and taking this course after I complete the CNA program? Is this extra certification necessary to work in a hospital or do most hospitals train the nurse's aides to perform pct skills regardless and don't view it as a necessity? In other words, would the extra certification be necessary and worth it in the long run? Thanks for the feedback :)

Usually not for PCT. At least, in columbus Ohio hospitals, you just need your BLS mostly everything is on the job training

At my hospital phlebototmists and monitor techs make more money than CNAs do so I wouldn't even get the CNA unless you want to go back to school to work as a med/surg nurse. However, as a monitor tech you would have more cardiac experience and as a phlebotomist you would have lab experience. It all depends on your future education plans.

All techs at my hospital must be phlebotomy certified. The hospital pays for the training though. And techs that work on telemetry floors (as I do) must perform EKG's, and some of the techs that have cross trained read the monitors.

Specializes in Critical Care, Emergency Medicine, Flight.

depends on your hospital. at ours we have a "VAT" team and they do the phelbotomy stuff, and techs dont do EKG's unless in er, so... depends on ur facility. Id give them a call and ask what they require :) Save you time and money!

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