what does allied health clinicians differ from others?

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i've been reading a lot of terms regarding allied health clinicians and i dont know what it means.

i am still a nursing student and i really want to know this because it appears mostly in our clinical course.

thanks everyone.

Specializes in LTC, Psych, Hospice.

allied health professions are clinical [color=#3300b5]health care professions distinct from [color=#3300b5]dentistry, [color=#3300b5]nursing and [color=#3300b5]medicine.[color=#3300b5][1] one estimate reported allied health professionals make up 60 percent of the total [color=#3300b5]health workforce.[color=#3300b5][2] they work in health care teams to make the [color=#3300b5]health care system function by providing a range of diagnostic, technical, therapeutic and direct [color=#3300b5]patient care and support services that are critical to the other health professionals they work with and the patients they serve.

from wiki

Specializes in CEN, SCRN.

Allied health are typically non-licensed or if licensed, not ultimately responsible for decisions in patient care.

i.e.: paramedics work under a physician's license, PAs work under a physician's license, CNAs work under a nurse's license, RRTs are not responsible for making decisions in patient care.

Hope this helps.

http://www.alliedhealthcareers.com/

Also includes:

Physical therapy

Speech therapy

Respiratory therapy

Occupational therapy

See grayed area at the bottom of the page on the link :)

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