Healthcare Boom Opens Up Huge Demand for Support Staff

Category : Pharmacy Students

Healthcare Boom Opens Up Huge Demand for Support Staff

If you’ve always wanted to work in a hospital or doctor’s office, becoming a healthcare support staffer might be just the shot in the arm your career needs. With training from a top-notch career college, in about 8 to 12 months, depending on the program, you can be a valued team member in a hospital, lab, pharmacy, physician’s office or dental practice.

According to the Department of Labor, healthcare will generate three million new jobs between 2006 and 2016, more than any other industry, employing over 12 million workers*. California, in particular, has a shortage of healthcare professionals, with vacancies across the state, raising salaries and increasing employment opportunities for high school graduates, career changers and other job seekers.

Although the media has focused on the critical need for registered nurses (RNs), well-trained and competent clinical support staff, such as Medical Assistants and Surgical Technologists, as well administrative support staff, including Health Claims Examiner/Medical Billers, are also an essential component in providing quality healthcare services.

In the past, on-the-job training might have been sufficient to become a member of a medical/dental office or lab support staff. But today, the bar has been raised: workers need to hit the ground running, with a complete understanding of the advances in medical technology, as well as the knowledge and practical skills necessary to be competent in different environments, whether private, public, governmental or university-based. As a Medical Assistant, for example, you might expect to help out with basic insurance billing, medical records and other office skills, but you might also check vital signs or help set up for physical exams. Medical Assistants have found work in hospitals, clinics, HMOs, and home health organizations.

Other hands-on, patient-oriented careers that have been increasing along with a growing and aging population are Massage Therapist, Pharmacy Technician, and Dental Assistant.

Vocational Nursing is a respected, rewarding career that allows you to help people each and every day. It’s a career that offers high demand opportunities for qualified nurses in hospitals, doctors’ offices, clinics, colleges, home health agencies, and convalescent homes. It’s also a great first step for those considering further advancement in nursing or other healthcare careers.

Optical Dispensing is another field with great potential. An optical dispensing specialist who passes the National Opticianry Exam and Contact Lens Registry Exam can be qualified to work as an ophthalmic lab technician, contact lens fitter, eye doctor’s assistant, manufacturer’s representative or optical office manager. You can even open your own store someday — an exciting and challenging opportunity to realize your financial and personal independence.

No matter what healthcare support staff position is right for you, look for an accredited college with qualified faculty, modern facilities, and placement assistance. An admissions representative can help you figure out where your aptitude and talents lie. And when the time comes, you can receive help with interviewing skills, resume preparation, and job leads.

“I felt like I was in a dead end in my career, and now a whole new world has opened up for me,” said one recent healthcare graduate.

For more information about becoming an American Career College student, call 877-809-8686 or complete the form below.

*”U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Outlook Handbook,” 2007-2008 edition.


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Paulette Brown-Hinds: Making the Media Work to Support Black Voices

Category : Region I

Paulette Brown-Hinds: Making the Media Work to Support Black Voices

Growing up in a predominantly African-American community in San Bernardino and having two parents actively engaged in their community, especially through work with local newspapers, Paulette has been able to follow in their footsteps, yet still carve her own path. Her first job—not surprisingly related to politics (even before graduating high school, she had worked with Congressman Joe Baca)—was in phone banking. Though she now works with the family newspaper, the Black Voice News, she began her career from the bottom, first handling the newspaper’s subscriptions. While originally wanting to attend Hampton University, Paulette decided to stay local and attend Cal State San Bernardino, graduating with a degree in English Literature. She continued her studies at the University of California, Riverside, earning her master’s and doctorate degrees in English in 1998.

Following graduation, Paulette and her husband uprooted their lives after she accepted a tenured position at the University of Cincinnati. Though they continued their tradition of community involvement, Paulette found that “a lot of the community we were trying to build in Cincinnati, we already had in Southern California, where we had a foundation.” Soon after returning to California, she focused her attention more closely on the family’s community newspaper, particularly when her father became ill. Although she enjoyed being able to work with her family and stay connected to her community, Paulette devised a structure that would enable her to work for her parents’ company, yet also allow more autonomy (she found it difficult to continue answering to them). During this process, she co-founded—with her sister—BPC Mediaworks, which allowed her to work with the paper while expanding her interests. “The best thing about founding BPC Mediaworks is being creative; I like to be able to implement my designs and visions.”

As a small-business owner, Paulette worries about how the economy will affect her business. She admits that advertising is the first thing to go in companies’ budgets, but has protected her businesses by “diversifying our interests. BPC Mediaworks is always getting clients beyond advertisers, thus expanding what we can offer.” Despite all her success, and whatever the economic vagaries, Paulette admits that her biggest challenge is still learning not to worry about what people think of her. She remembers agonizing over the decision to leave a tenured teaching position after working six years for her degree. “Overcoming being burdened by other people’s opinions is like layers; first you have to get over the outer layer—colleagues—then you have to get to the inside where family lies.” Over the course of her journey, putting aside those issues, Paulette recognizes that “I learned what I am good at and what I am not; I acknowledge my limitations and try to bring in people to do those things.” Among her goals, though, is to overcome such limitations wherever possible.

Paulette’s journey has been touched with celebrated political names. And because BPC Mediaworks grew so rapidly in its early stages, Paulette had the opportunity to work with the likes of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Maria Shriver. Because of the nature of the company she started, Paulette continues to explore a wide array of interests and creative projects. She reflects that her biggest accomplishment has been to “create a life I like. There’s no separation between work and community, and I feel like I can create my own rules and am not bound by others.”

Paulette recalls that she had always envisioned a life as president of a college; while that dream has taken a back seat (at least for now), mentoring students has become a key focus; she has instituted programs such as the Black Voice News Internship Program. When counseling college students, Paulette guides them by asking, “What is your ideal world? What would it look like and what do you need to get there? What would be your fallback plan that would still keep you in that world?” She reveals her pleasure at being able to make a difference through mentoring those who are generally quite hopeful, and who believe in their potential to create an ideal world. “I still have an opportunity to shape that and to help people do things that are innovative in the world.”

Here is a life all the more satisfying by having been dictated from within, among the great benefits of the entrepreneurial spirit.

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