Published Sep 2, 2008
smellyacres, BSN, RN
342 Posts
What is the difference between a CNA and a medical assistant?
Miwila
274 Posts
There is none. Different names for the same job title.
Are you sure? Because I saw two different programs, one to become a CNA and one to become a medical assistant, offered at the same facility.
My bad...I should read posts slower. I thought you were asking for the difference between a CNA a NURSING ASSISTANT. I don't know exactly what a Medical Assistant does but I know they don't provide bedside care the way a CNA does. Medical Assistants are usually found in docor's offices and CNA's work in LTC or hospitals. Personally, I have always found Medical Assistant programs to be rip-offs's; vocational schools suck in these students and get them thousands of dollars into debt (my brother accrued $7000 worth of student loans to become a Medical Assistant), the programs last 8 months - 1 year and then when you finish school you wind up working for $8-10 an hour? IMHO it just isn't worth it.
soon_to_be_LPN-Nurse
28 Posts
sorry, i have to disagree.
they aren't the same (cna vs. ma)
i'm doing cna right now i'm going every saturday for the next 8 saturdays (8am-4pm.) then i believe we have to do 2 more days of clinicals.
i was going to go to school to be a medical assistant which takes 3 semesters at my school. then i found out that the lpn program takes 3 semesters as well i decided to do the lpn because more/better job opportunities being a lpn vs. medical assistant.
i hope this helps.
sorry miwila,
should have waited on your post to clear things up.
i meant to say also around here ma's don't get much pay & not a lot of jobs for ma's.
rph3664
1,714 Posts
Yes, v/t schools tout Medical Assistant to be the greatest career since sliced bread, and pretty much all they can do is work in doctor's offices with very restricted duties.
CandAmommy
134 Posts
I agree with the last poster. I personally don't think it is worth taking the MA program when you can spend the same amount or a few months longer on becoming a LPN, and most schools that offer the MA program are private and charge an outrageous amount of money. Believe me I am almost finished wih my AS in Medical Insurance through a private univeristy and am regretting it. I will have so many loans to pay off. I am going to start CNA classes and than get into a LPN program even after all of that. Being a CNA is a great stepping stone for LPN programs!
i'm doing cna right now i'm going every saturday for the next 8 saturdays (8am-4pm.) then i believe we have to do 2 more days of clinicals..
.
thanks,
yeah, i was looking for a cna program that offers weekend classes because i go to school full time and i saw an ma program that offers weekend classes and i was wondering what it was.
thanks again!
I can kind of understand why someone would want to work as an MA instead of as a nurse. Perhaps they have decided they don't want to have to provide beside care. Maybe they just prefer the doctor's office setting or they don't want a career that might require them to work nights and weekends the way a nurse has too. But think of what would happen if there were no MA's. Doctors offices would have to hire LPN's who they would have to pay a higher wage (in my area I have even seen want ad's for MA's offering $6.50 an hour). The same students studying to become MA's would simply become LPN's. It seems to me that whoever might be benefitting from the growth of MA's as a field, it certainly aren't the MA's themselves.
jennileigh8182
51 Posts
In total agreement with everyone else. I had a friend who went to school to be an MA and makes like $9/hr. So not worth it. I'm taking the course now to be a CNA to gain some experience before I start the accelerated nursing program next fall. The community college that I'm attending has night classes so that I'm able to work pretty much full time (if my boss weren't a jerk that kept cutting my hours just to save money - small businesses are just LOVELY to work for). I attend three nights a week 5:10-9pm, but lab nights are only until 8 and clinicals will be 5:00-10:00. The class is a full semester, but only because I'm also getting acute care training. The CNA (LTC) portion is done by, I believe, mid-October, and the remainder of the semester, until the first week of December, is acute care. There are a lot of nursinga ssistants in my area, so the combination class was a much better option to getting hired afterwards.
DA314
362 Posts
KY Dreamer- are you by any chance taking the CNA class at the BCTCS leestown campus?
I only ask because the day/time/# of weeks is exactly what I'm taking too!