
There is no question with regard to trade certification: medication aide, nursing assistant and other health professionals all need it in order to work at their designated fields. Certification basically refers to a vital piece of paper that people in sensitive trades are required to have… and arguably, no trade is more sensitive than working in a medical facility, such as a hospital, a clinic or a pharmacy.
What can you expect from training to get certification? Medication aide aspirants will wonder if they actually need to study medicine in order to quality for training. This is not so. One does not need to have an extensive knowledge of medicine, although this is of course a plus… what is more important for a medication aide, is to develop a sense of organization and punctuality, which are both required skills on the job.
Moreover, a medication aide wishing to work in a specific state must take the certification exam set by that state. While some elements of certification may be standardized, certain states may require some medication aides to be intimately familiar with certain laws that would govern their performance on the job. Passing rates for the Board would also differ for different regions.
What is a medication aide? A medication aide is also called a “medical technician” or “med tech” in some regions. The prime responsibility of a med tech is to assist nurses and doctors in dispensing medication on the job. They differ from pharmacy technicians in that their primary responsibility is tending to inpatients – that is, patients who are required to stay in the hospital in which they are treated.
Certainly many inpatients also rely on the medication dispensed by pharmacies… but the help given by med techs or medication aides is indispensable within hospitals. In the case of late-night medications, when close relatives are no longer allowed to stay and acquire and dispense medication for the sick, medication aides take over. They should be depended on for their ability to stick to a schedule and not get the medications mixed up.
Medication aides are not only called for in hospitals – they are also useful in senior homes, or other places that are badly in need of good medical professionals.
In order to gain proper certification, medication aide must be able to pass the Board for a certified Medication Training Course. But this is not all. An application for medication aide must be filed with the hospital or institution one wishes to be hired in. And, of course, one must be listed on the official Medication Aide Registry of the country in which he or she wishes to work.
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Dr. Robin Falkov is licensed acupuncture physician with extensive training in traditional Chinese herbal medicine. She is a Diplomate of the National Board of Homeopathic Examiners and has worked with Homeopathy for over 20 years. She has had one of the earliest wholesale accounts with the well known, pioneering Life Extension Foundation in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. and has worked with nutritional supplements for over 25 years. She currently resides in New Mexico and consults with patients by …
Help answer the question about medical courses
Short medical courses in New york?I live in New York near new hide park city. I’m kind of new here. My background is fashion designing but I want to get into medical field now. I want to know which course is short and very demandable in New York. My options are Medical assistant, Dental assistant, lab technician, and phlebotomy or x-ray technician. Please advice. If you can help me with colleges too which medical college is best in newyork. Can you also tell me how much i'll make if i choose any course from these. Thank you in advance.
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April 27th, 2007
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Well, not the way you put it. You need a 4-year college degree to enter medical school, so you certainly can't take medical school courses while in high school. However, if you take a few college-level courses while in high school that transfer, you might save yourself a semester of college so it won't take a full 4 years.
i go to Tulane University and i know that there advantages to getting a pre-med bachelors from here if you plan to go to their med school. every school is different but if you want to go to their med school i would go to undergraduate there. for one thing you might have some of the same professors and you will make connections with important people in the area. you will also probably make other friends that are planning on going to UCLA med school as well and thats always helpful. med school is extremely comptetitive and if UCLA is where you want to go for that then it wouldn't hurt to do your undergrad there and try to make as many connections as possible.
Most likely not.
gc
None that I've heard of. Moreover, medical school involve a lot of hands-on labs as well, so an online course would be highly suspect.
It's not the individual pieces of information that matter, but the education as a whole.
What I learned in 1985 may or may not be applicable today, but I have a good foundation of knowledge upon which to build when new information becomes available.
I will never have to regurgitate each step of the Krebs cycle again (God willing!), but I may need to understand how a condition or drug affects it. A psychiatrist may not need to know the finer points of renal physiology, but he/she WILL have patients with kidney problems, and will need to understand the impact of psychotropic medications on renal function, and vice versa.
I've probably forgotten more than most people ever learn, but when I need to understand something new, or remind myself just how or why something works, I can do it.
You've got to learn it all.
College of the Holy Cross (West of Boston) has an 87% acceptance rate for students applying to medical school. They just opened a 60 million dollar science complex.