Looking to enter healthcare field - but on a p/t basis. What career??

Nurses General Nursing

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Hello!

I've been on this site for a few weeks and originally posted a question in the Student's Forum about being a CNA.

There is a class coming up in 3 weeks (is held for 15weeks from Oct to Jan. 2010) and I may not make all of the pre-reqs (background check, blood and immunizations) to get in by Oct. 3rd. There is another 15-week class in January.

I work full-time at an Ivy League University and I make about $52K (37hrs week) and I don't have a college degree. However, I'd like to supplement my income for my family and do something in the health-care field that would allow me to work some evenings part-time.

I will be taking a home-health aide class for sure as it's only 2 weeks and that will definatley allow me to work some nights at about $9-$10 an hour.

But, is there a field I can get in to with a higher per-hour salary, and a short learning time and that would allow me to work evenings? I keep reading horror stories about what CNA's do and I'm wondering if I should scrap those plans before I shell out $1K for the class. I'm also interested in Phlebotoy and EKG, but these are only offered at technical or private schools and cost $10-$20/K for tuition and I just can't afford that at all. I really cannot take a loan out at this time.

Any help would be appreciated.

Specializes in Case mgmt., rehab, (CRRN), LTC & psych.

Moved to the General Nursing Discussion forum for more feedback.

Without a degree or a lot more training, you aren't likely going to be making more than that in healthcare.

Specializes in Critical Care, Education.

If you are not trying to limit yourself to providing clinical services, you may want to look into medical transcription. My organization utilizes independent contractors extensively. They work from home and are paid on a 'piecework' basis (based on productivity, not hours). Very flexible. If you already have good typing skills, your only real hurdle would be learning medical terminology. Most urban areas have transcriptionist training programs that are readily available.

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