Re: Medical Technologist program Ft Worth
Hi,
I WAS a MT... and I went through TSU for my last year (MT school in Fort Worth - near All Saints).
To get a MT degree, you take about 100 - 120 hours at a university (in my case, UNT) and then your last year is through TSU -- about 6-7 months of classes (8a-3p x 5 days a week) and then the last 3-4 months of residency (free labor at a hospital x 40 hr weeks). All in all, it takes about 4-5 years to get your degree. ... then you take a national registry... plus you must recert each year.
When I went 12 years ago, it was only a Bachelor's program. Now, I think they are teaching MLT classes (associates)...and cytotechs.
I definately
DON'T recommend the field if you would like to eat anything besides beans and rice for the rest of your life. The
pay SUCKS and everyone in the hospital
disresepcts you... or they think you are just a phlebotomist (actually, the don't know the difference between a phlebotomist who has no formal training, but is OTJ trained and a tech with a degree that performs the tests.... people in the hospital just call anyone from the lab a "lab tech"). The lab is everyone's whipping boy -- whenever the nurses forget to order the test, you can bet that the story that the doc hears is "I don't know why the lab doesn't have it done yet"....
With a bachelor's degree (that will take you 5 years to get through all the biology and chemistry classes), you will make less than an ADN nurse. Lab does not get paid bonuses for picking up additional shifts. Shift diff is usually like 2.50 - 3.00/hour for weekends where nurses are getting $6.00. No one acknowledges lab week (other than the lab). These sound like little petty things, but it just shows how little you are valued when you work in the lab.
I am not trying to burst your bubble, but I am just telling you the truth. It is a very hard program (MT school) and you are not compensated for your time or your knowledge. I loved actually "doing" my job, but it is all the other crap that brings you down. Talk to some other techs who have been doing it for a while and be really sure that you are willing to take all the ups and downs that come with the job before you go through hell (MT school) to get your degree.
LifeLONGstudent,
BS(MT), MT(ASCP) 1994-2006
accelerated BSN graduate on 8/14/06 --- did my last clinical today
Nursing News