ED Tech

Nursing Students Technicians

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What exactly is an Ed Tech, how do you become one and where do they work?

As I mentioned in the other thread, your best bet is to just try to get into a hospital anyway you can and go from there. They can be tricky to get in to initially. Be willing to take any job(clinical) you can in the hospital, then just transition down to the ED after a period of time. A lot of people start out by being a Patient Observer (or "Sitter") per diem, and then get jobs as techs in my hospital.

Our Techs can draw blood and do 12 lead ekgs on the floors and in the ED, but in the ED your scope of practice is a bit more fuzzy just because of the nature of the environment. The regular techs down there can do a bit more then we do on the floors. As someone mentioned earlier, its a whole of of gophering, and transportation and keeping the crazies/drunks from falling all over the floor. Get ready to run! I generally enjoy it when I get floated there, but a lot of that has to do with the people working down there. They are a fun bunch!

The role of ER tech seems to vary a lot more than PCTs on the floors. PCTs on the floors are pretty much run ragged non stop in most cases, whereas in the ER there seems to be a lot more downtime in between stretches of craziness, unless you work in some ghetto ER, in which case the craziness rarely stops. Most people would prefer the ER to an inpatient PCT job because its a lot less physically demanding, although the culture of an ER can be more harsh, cliquish and ego driven in some cases. At least this is my impression from visiting lots of ERs as an EMT and working as a tech on the floors.

My opinion is that aside from maybe a "nurse tech" position which some ICUs have, ER techs are pretty much the only tech positions where you can learn something valuable if you are going into Nursing, or EMS. Techs on the floors are basically just aides who spend most of their shift cleaning up poop, running after call lights and doing much of the patient care while the RNs chart, give meds, do assessments, and gab/text on their cell phones. That's why I generally advise nursing students to skip a tech job unless they are cruising through Nursing school and nearing the end and want to get their foot in the door at a hospital. Being an inpatient tech has limited value in terms of education, its lots of stress for little gain. About the only value you'll get is networking and maybe making your first couple weeks as a rookie RN slightly less harrowing, as I've seen brand new RNs struggle mightily doing things like making an occupied bed when an immobile patient is covered in urine and BM and has tubes, drains and dressings all over them, so I guess if nothing else PCT experience will make those situations less awkward at first.

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