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.

If u can't handle LTC, then u won't handle everyday patients whether in LTC or hospital or just walking pass on the street

Extreme overgeneralization...that's like saying if you can't handle pre-schoolers, you can't teach high-school.

Or, like saying if you can't spell "you", then u can't be respected as a professional.

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

The bulk of the comment is derogatory insinuations about any carbon-based entity within the confines of the LTC On Haunted Hill.

A cursory search of allnurses will reveal that many nurses and CNAs love the geriatric population and actually prefer it to the acute-care facilities. How did you become as cynical as you are? Are you a family member of someone who was treated like crap in an LTC? You are a healthcare professional who's observed this situation yourself?

Specializes in Nephrology, Cardiology, ER, ICU.

Lets debate the TOPIC not the POSTER please.

Thanks.

Specializes in Psych, LTC/SNF, Rehab, Corrections.
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.

I don't understand why some have an issue with this comment.

It's mostly true..although, I'd say that the residents aren't even half the problem. They make the job bearable...imo. It's the only reason that anyone stays. Definitely isn't the pay...

I understand that some have their preferences, but, I prefer that population.

Whatever's wrong with them, it's not their fault.

Some of these ppl aren't in their 'right mind'. Now, the sane pts in your neighborhood ER...

*laugh*

Anyway, I'm no longer in LTC.

91 residents + 3 aides (on DAYshift)= Nuff said.

I was stocking my closet when one of my coworkers told me that she didn't think 'such ans such' was coming to work.

I swallowed the urge to curse.

If I hadn't cared about leaving my coworkers hanging or the residents...I would've left THAT day.

I am honestly not going to risk getting this overhyped certification, getting a huge loan and not having a job. I'd rather spend it on a cna or emt and find a job and get an associates.

I'd say that the residents aren't even half the problem. They make the job bearable...imo. .

You are correct about the "sane patients" in the local hospital. The increasingly difficult position CNAs are put in will make it that much more difficult to provide proper and heartfelt care to clients.

Nurses should know and acknowledge the effects of Stress and Anxiety on the human psyche. Selyer ring a bell to anyone?

This article is very helpful because i finished my medical assistant diploma in May 2013 and it is extremely hard to get a job. Every job wants at least 1year or more experience but how is a new graduate suppose to get a job if no one is willing to give us a chance. I did a 3 month externship and they don't even count the externship as experience. They want paid experience. So now i was thinking of doing the Cna course since i was certified in patient care technician. I really don't want to clean people but i need a job now. These technical and training school know its very hard to get a job and they just want our money. I was thinking about going back to nursing school and even they want two years experience. You just want to improve your life and these school just want your money. I'm just so frustrated!

Tiffannij, Thanks for bumping this topic, wow interesting read. Where abouts are you located? Here in Northern California (Sacramento area), I see maybe 1 or 2 MA job offers a month and same 'ol thing, minimum one year experience... Yikes ! However, CNA job openings are plentiful.

Specializes in Pediatrics and Women's Health.

I find this article to be true to a degree but can't completely agree 100%. I'm both a CMA and CNA. The current job I have now is beneficial to my experience with these two certifications. I've had times were I have gotten offers because of my CMA and also as a CNA. I also gotten no offers for long periods of time.

I got certified in medical assisting in NY ten years ago and never got a job offer until I relocated to Va. When I got my certification as a nursing assistant during my first attempt at nursing school, I got two offers but than relocated to NY and had difficulty getting a job as both an CMA and as a CNA.

Now that I'm in Fl, I couldn't get a CNA or PCT job to save my life and I find it strange. Because of my CMA I was hired by my department at the company I work for and my experience with the Geriatric population also worked in my favor. It truly depends on geographic location, where you go and who you work for.

Specializes in Critical Care.

While I agree it is grossly underpaid, if you can't see the forest for the trees, then get a different job. Most people don't aspire to be a CNA their whole life, and if they do, then God bless them. In most cases it's a stepping stone. You strike me as one of those people that think they'll waltz into nursing because it pays well, without realizing what it entails. Every NS should REQUIRE students to work as a CNA for a while to weed students out, and a lot of NSs are catching drift. You need to toughen up or get a desk job.

I agree 110%. I recently spoke to UT(umiversity of tn) about what some other states have been doing to weed out nursing applicants. They are working on having pre nursing students be certified cnas and have worked for a min of 6 mo prior to applying to the njrsing program. I think its a great way to weed out students who can't see the REAL side of nursing. :)

Yeah its gross at times, and I can not wait to become a RN..but I ADORE being a nursing assistant! There is so much more to it then changing diapers. I have a premed degree and wanted to work a little before applying to nursing school so I went and got my CNA license. Its a little disheartening how overworked/underpaid the job is (especially after busting my butt for 4 years for my BS!) but the patients make it so worth it. I worked at a long term care facility for 6 months, then switched to a pulmonary rehabilitation hospital in March. I still go visit all of the residents at the nursing home, whenever I need advice I go visit my "surrogate grandma". She's 94 years old and loves hearing about all of my dating fiascos haha.

There have been multiple days when I step onto the unit and there are 6 or 7 call lights on, a bed alarm going off, and one of me standing there going "Uh.....where the heck do I start?". You just take a deep breath and dive in. The nurses "yelling at you for their vitals" are probably as equally stressed out with the ridiculous nurse to patient ratios in LTC facilities. I never take anyone yelling at me personally because there have been days that I've wanted to yell too. I've grown up a lot in the past year I have been working as a CNA. My time management is much better, I've learned how to fake a smile and pretend I'm calm and collected when I'm being pulled in 10 different directions and really just want to go use the bathroom! I've developed some awesome skills that are going to benefit me as a nursing student and hopefully as a future R.N. Yeah the job isn't glamourous, but someone needs to do it. Changing diapers or making beds doesn't seem like much - but imagine being one of these patients that can't go to the bathroom on their own. We mean the world to them. I've held a woman's hand as she died. I'm there on the holidays eating Thanksgiving dinner with them, rubbing their backs when they are sick at 2 in the morning. The two R.Ns I work with the most call me their "little savior". Helping people makes me happy, thats why I got into health care in the first place. To me at least, being a CNA is so rewarding. I love working hard and going home at the end of the day really feeling like I got to make a difference in other people's lives. I can not wait to hopefully start nursing school and get to make differences in bigger ways. But you gotta start somewhere. Even as a nurse the bedpans, diapers, throw up, etc are all still a part of the job description. Its all a part of working in a hospital!

I would love to take a medical assistant class just because that would be a whole new skill set to learn. But most of the MA jobs I have seen are at doctors offices and I'm not sure I would enjoy that. Personally, I'd miss the thrill of working on the floor and the relationships I have with my patients. I'm sorry you feel the way you do about being a CNA, and hopefully working as a medical assistant is a much better fit for you.

Honestly, I feel like some of you must have never worked before. I've spent most of my working life in retail. For me, being a CNA sounds like a better deal. You know why? Because the people have a good reason to be grumpy, needy, etc. I've had people scream at me because they somehow lost their receipt and simply can't understand why I won't do their return.

Any job you're at, when you're at the bottom of the totem pole, will likely be like this. You'll be overworked and underpaid. Such is life. I'm sorry, but going through life as if you're somehow above the job you're doing is not a good attitude to have. You simply have to do that job the very best you can. So, sometimes it's not everything you thought it would be. Hardly anything ever is. And hopefully, it makes you a more compassionate and understanding person.

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