Why become a CNA? Be a Medical assistant instead

Nursing Students CNA/MA

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This isn't a commercial but a warning.

Like most folks here, I decided to become a CNA to learn from the "ground up"," pay my dues", get in contact with healthcare professionals. It's the biggest mistake I've made in recent years.

Know why? CNA school doesnt really tell you what being a CNA is about. The private CNA school admission officers lie and gloss over the truth all the while collecting that exorbitant tuition. At a skilled nursing facility where 99% of you will start in, it's 80% changing diapers and making beds. It is a back-breaking, thankless, feces-collecting, low-paying scut job that you can master within months if not weeks or days. I should know. I have.

All those techniques of bedbathing, turning, grooming? Hah. Out the window. CNA school makes you think you have all the time in the world to attend to these patient needs. No way. You have an overloaded roster of patients and no time to talk, let alone groom them. You have your lead CNAs, your other residents and the nurses themselves yelling at you to attend to their needs. The first month, I was almost crippled for a week because my back was so aching and I had used proper body mechanics. These patients are so overweight, that turning them on the bed just to change their diaper is excruciating at times. CNA school didn't help with that problem among the other REAL situations that arise in LTC.

Being a CNA means you see the whiniest, neediest dark side of people. After I became one, I've heard one consistent caveat amongst nursing professionals, "You'll get burnt out and will start hating your patients." All true.

Another caveat? The nurses, whom you work with and are hoping to become one day, you eventually deeply resent. Why? CNAs do ALL the heavy lifting. If a resident vomits or ***** in his pants? Guess who the nurse immediately calls because she can't stomach it. You'll have three call lights to answer and the nurse is yelling at you on top of that to get her vitals done.

And for those hoping to get into a hospital? Good luck, because to basically get in you have to be a blood relative or really lucky. Especially if you have no experience. Those CNAs working at those hospitals are basically lifers doing the same thing over and over for years on end. Don't envy them too much.

Become a Medical assistant. You have more interaction with the doctors and nurses, higher variety of patients rather than just old people. No heavy lifting except for maybe transferring once in a long while. The pay is roughly the same, the schooling is longer though. Tuition is a little more but totally worth it. It also counts as healthcare experience which is key since my eventual goal is to get into physician assistant school. Barring that, then nursing school.

I came in like you all nursing hopefuls wanting to help people. It gets harder week by week to maintain that attitude but there are some bright spots like when one of my residents relatives pulled me aside to tell me that her mother loves me taking care of her. Yet, I can feel my attitude waning. I've been in for three months and it feels like years.

I'm doing you a favor here. Do yourself a favor and wave off becoming a CNA and be a MA. I wish I did. As for the tuition? There are public school options. I found one for $750, that teaches front and back office at local adult school here in California.

You have been warned.

agreed, ldleangel. we all have times where the job can be thankless, but mostly from the charge nurses. It ccan be dfficult, but you have to care to be in the field. It sounds like this is not the field for you. You would be doign yourself and others a favor if you do not continue in the field. I wish you luck finding the right fit.

Everything u said abouy Cnas was derogatory..

When u have clinicals it shows u How it is...we take care of people And work hard but u have to have a strong personality and body to be a cna.

Yes u may get **** on u and vomit and other bodily fluids..u may get hit..kicked..whatever but its good honest work.

and I'm proud to be a Cna because It will make me a stronger nurse And even if its a struggle I'm going to stick with it..and no I never hate my resodents and I don't resent nurses even ones that prolley think I might be nothing because I care about people and I have empathy...the way u talk no offense but I don't know if u would be cut out for nursing if u r going because believe it or not nurses deal with getting **** on and vomit and blood and they can get in more trouble...CNA IS A JOB OF COMPASSION AND LOVE..not hate And greed..sorry just the truth...I hope u learn to c more experiences as positive things u have triumphed in your life And not horrible decisions which u shall regret because lifes too short to have a box full of regrets And it seems u have a trunk load

..

This isn't a commercial but a warning.

Like most folks here, I decided to become a CNA to learn from the "ground up"," pay my dues", get in contact with healthcare professionals. It's the biggest mistake I've made in recent years.

Know why? CNA school doesnt really tell you what being a CNA is about. The private CNA school admission officers lie and gloss over the truth all the while collecting that exorbitant tuition. At a skilled nursing facility where 99% of you will start in, it's 80% changing diapers and making beds. It is a back-breaking, thankless, feces-collecting, low-paying scut job that you can master within months if not weeks or days. I should know. I have.

All those techniques of bedbathing, turning, grooming? Hah. Out the window. CNA school makes you think you have all the time in the world to attend to these patient needs. No way. You have an overloaded roster of patients and no time to talk, let alone groom them. You have your lead CNAs, your other residents and the nurses themselves yelling at you to attend to their needs. The first month, I was almost crippled for a week because my back was so aching and I had used proper body mechanics. These patients are so overweight, that turning them on the bed just to change their diaper is excruciating at times. CNA school didn't help with that problem among the other REAL situations that arise in LTC.

Being a CNA means you see the whiniest, neediest dark side of people. After I became one, I've heard one consistent caveat amongst nursing professionals, "You'll get burnt out and will start hating your patients." All true.

Another caveat? The nurses, whom you work with and are hoping to become one day, you eventually deeply resent. Why? CNAs do ALL the heavy lifting. If a resident vomits or ***** in his pants? Guess who the nurse immediately calls because she can't stomach it. You'll have three call lights to answer and the nurse is yelling at you on top of that to get her vitals done.

And for those hoping to get into a hospital? Good luck, because to basically get in you have to be a blood relative or really lucky. Especially if you have no experience. Those CNAs working at those hospitals are basically lifers doing the same thing over and over for years on end. Don't envy them too much.

Become a Medical assistant. You have more interaction with the doctors and nurses, higher variety of patients rather than just old people. No heavy lifting except for maybe transferring once in a long while. The pay is roughly the same, the schooling is longer though. Tuition is a little more but totally worth it. It also counts as healthcare experience which is key since my eventual goal is to get into physician assistant school. Barring that, then nursing school.

I came in like you all nursing hopefuls wanting to help people. It gets harder week by week to maintain that attitude but there are some bright spots like when one of my residents relatives pulled me aside to tell me that her mother loves me taking care of her. Yet, I can feel my attitude waning. I've been in for three months and it feels like years.

I'm doing you a favor here. Do yourself a favor and wave off becoming a CNA and be a MA. I wish I did. As for the tuition? There are public school options. I found one for $750, that teaches front and back office at local adult school here in California.

You have been warned.

There are lots of CNA openings at LTCs because the jobs suck. It's like working in a psyche ward with disabled, incontinent, tyrannical geriatrics.

Negative..:( horrible way to think of it..

Specializes in GERIATRICS,HOSPICE,MENTAL/PHYS DISABILED.

I feel really bad that the OP has had to experience this. It's true, some LTC facilities are like this, but not all. I originally worked as a CNA for 5 yrs before I became an LPN. I got my CNA through the LTC facility that I worked at, went to school for 3 months. It was very demanding work @ times. It's true that we had nurses that did not believe that they were supposed to do "CNA work", but we also had nurses that weren't scared to get "down in the trenches" with us so to speak. But working in LTC as a CNA did have its good moments too. When I made my residents smile from rubbing their legs & feet with lotion; when I went that extra mile to make sure they got that special snack they like or put their things away in their rooms just the way they wanted them, or even just pushing them around outside in their wheelchairs for little walks. Just doing those little things meant alot to them. Being a CNA prepared me for becoming an LPN & allowed me to understand things from a CNAs point of view, it made me a better nurse overall. I feel that people should be a CNA before becoming a LPN/RN because it gives you a different outlook on things, makes you see all the colors in the picture, not just shades of gray. As far as the OP's talking up medical assisting, I feel that if you don't want to become a nurse in any way, but still want to be in the healthcare field, then go ahead & do Medical Assisting. But, if you do plan on becoming a nurse & don't want to get your CNA first, then go ahead & go to school to be a nurse. Think of it like this, How long does it take you to go to school to be a medical assistant? Almost a year, maybe? It takes about the same amount of time to get your LPN. Why waste your money? And remember this: No matter what they tell you-a medical assistant is not the same thing as a nurse.:twocents:

Specializes in LTC, Psych, Hospice.
There are lots of CNA openings at LTCs because the jobs suck. It's like working in a psyche ward with disabled, incontinent, tyrannical geriatrics.

Oh my! What a terrible thing to say! Old people can't help the way they are. I, personally, LOVE the geriatric population. Is this how you think of your grandmother?

Specializes in Long Term Care.

i found this to be a stupid post as it was based on the opinion of the writer! :devil:

There are lots of CNA openings at LTCs because the jobs suck. It's like working in a psyche ward with disabled, incontinent, tyrannical geriatrics.

There are lots of openings at LTCs because there is a need. The jobs are not glamorous, but CNAs are valuable in any setting for that reason. I work in a geriatric psyche ward and many of the patients are disabled, incontinent, and tyrannical geriatrics as you say, but they are also human beings that deserve respect. I find the job very rewarding.

Compassion cannot be taught. I'm just saying.

**runs off to toilet someone AFTER throwing linens on the floor**

Specializes in None yet.

Here you have to be a CNA to go to nursing school. In my CNA program there were a few Medical Assistants trying to get their CNA in order to apply for nursing schools. One of the MA's even failed out of the course, she thought it would be a cake walk because she was a MA but ended up failing the clinical because she would not do peri-care, she kept handing the washcloths to the other student even in front of the instructor!

I think being a MA is a good short track for someone who is interested in a medical career but not sure where to go. However most of the tech schools that offer programs for it around here are very expensive compared to the community college LPN programs and even some ADN programs which are twice as long. If someone knows they want to be a nurse becoming a MA is not a stepping stone to get there though!

LTC in the United States will come crashing down in the near future. It is a Tower of Babylon that can not endure. We will see how many RNs who "just love" LTC will find that they are "not cut out for it"

24 hour care for the oncoming onslaught of immobile, incontinent, physically/verbally/sexually abusive, and abandoned baby boomers will be a task to great for our society to accommodate. CNA's overflow will fall on the RNs who will then fall by the wayside. It's already happening. They will be replaced by even less competent and inexperienced RN/LPNs but with greater expectations and pressure and the degradation will spiral.

CNAs who complain about their working conditions are a symptom not a disease.

It is curious to watch RNs attack CNAs, while lauding the infinite wellspring of joys and perfectly beautiful relationships with clients who cause them nary a bit of stress. Of course RNs in LTC primarily push paper and meds, insert the occasional catheter, and perhaps, turn a client or two a month. So, that may indeed be their experience.

It is true that geriatrics are found in all health fields, but nowhere like LTC.

I thought being a nurse was a lifestyle not a job, and that RNs applied their training to all people. Apparently, for most posters here, it only applies to the people filling their piggy banks. Of course, clients will love whoever is giving them their pain pills.

There are also different levels of care in an LTC SNF. Intensive, dependent and laborious patients are usually lumped together and you will find a high turnover rate there. So that the position where you need the greatest experience is often filled by the person with the least.

To those who object to my description of LTCs as psyche wards, please tell me why so many anti-depressants, mood relaxants, and anti-psychotics are shoved down the clients' mouths.

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.

Exactly the kind of post that makes me wish we had a section where not just anyone can come here and slather their hostilities and inaccurate representations here on the forum. To anyone who might not have a medical background, the above is a grossly skewed and unwarranted diatribe written by someone who has no nursing background and should be evaluated as such.

nursel56 - there is a difference between Nursing and Medical. The bulk of the comment is nursing. Everything stated in the comment can be seconded by a cursory search of reputable sources.

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