Rma

Nursing Students CNA/MA

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Im thinking about taking the medical assistant program at a school near me. The lady i talked to said that I would be a RMA, registerd medical assistant. So my question is what is the difference between a RMA and a CMA, and the difference in a RMA and LPN.

Specializes in med/surg, psych, public health.
The scope in practice of a RMA is not same in every State. I have a few good friends who have been a RMA for over 10 years and do not do half the things you listed above, so consider yourself lucky. I also know RMA's who have completed a program and cannot find a job for whatever reason. Most RMA provide advance basic care, almost in line with EMT-B who provides basic first aide while the paaramedic provides advance care. So, the differance beteeen an RMA/LPN is that of level of care one is sllowed to perform according to their license/certification.

I can tell you i would trust an LPN to perform medical care on me in a hospital setting before I would let an RMA as you stated your State replacing LPN's with RMA... wow .... JMHO

AMEN to your last sentence, ITA. :up:

Also, IMO, Many RMA's misrepresent themselves, and that is totally dishonest.

as a cma i feel it was a huge waste of my time. yes, i had the skills to take blood and give injections, but instead my job was precerting for mri's. cma's are not utilized here in my state very well.

CMA is basically a receptionist, you welcome the patients at the Dr. office, write down their names, get their insurance, make copies, take calls, make calls etc.. Actually no real pt care!!! Not here in S. TX... Took a training through the Internet, was 6 months for about $600 but never went into being a CMA. Then went for CNA took me only a month and is so much more fun. I am waiting for my acceptance letter for RN school.

Maybe in Texas this is the case, but in Florida a CMA/RMA is NOT just a receptionist. Although a Medical assistant can work in that capacity schools here teach a much broader scope which includes phlebotomy, medication administration and assisting the physician with procedures. I loved being a Medical assistant and Loved the variety of skills I was able to practice in various settings. In response to other posters who state an MA is not a nurse, This is very true. Nursing and medical assisting are completely different fields. As a nursing student I have learned alot when it comes to bedside nursing and that area of the field. MA teaching focuses on outpatient care, but you learn a lot about Law, insurance, billing, and office administration which nursing school does not go into. Nurse can cross over into the outpatient setting very easily, but that is not true of medical assistants crossing into the hospital setting. Sometimes I get a sense people on this site resent MA, probably mostly because some misrepresent themselves at Nurses. I personally never did that, though fellow coworkers who were in fact nurses referred to me that way. Medical Assisting is a very valid and rewarding career. For me, I wanted to go beyond that and further my education and experience, Hence Nursing school. But I dont regret starting out as an RMA.

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