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Certified Nursing Assistants

Certified nursing assistants play a crucial part in their patients' care. A CNA works under the supervision of nurses to provide high-quality care to the patients. While the job involves long hours and different tasks, everyday interaction with patients delivers some of the best rewards any career can provide. Additionally, during their career course, CNAs develop different skills and knowledge on how to apply person-centered care principles to day-to-day chores. According to the research, every day, more than 2.5 million nursing assistants help old, fragile, or chronically sick people in their own homes, nursing homes, and other long-term care facilities. They offer about 80 to 90 percent of direct care to clients in long-term care institutions, demonstrating empathy, patience, and wisdom in their work. CNAs are an important part of the health care team but despite their major role in patient care, sometimes they are overlooked. This article discuss responsibilities and treatments given by CNA’s.


Responsibilities of the CNA

CNAs are the skilled professionals who provide the most direct patient care in long-term health care facilities. They are frequently in charge of caring for other people's loved ones including, their bathing, talking, and feeding. CNA job requirements are emotionally, cognitively, and physically demanding, and performing the job well requires a unique combination of intelligence, patience, and compassion.

Here are the five basic responsibilities of the CNA.

  1. Feeding, bathing, and dressing

Certified nursing assistants help people with daily living activities. This generally means assisting them in bathing, dressing, and feeding themselves. These patients may include stroke sufferers, senior inhabitants of nursing homes, and persons recovering in a hospital following an accident, injury, or surgery

  1. Taking vital signs

CNAs are responsible for taking and documenting patient vital signs, including temperature, blood pressure, breathing rate, and pulse. Routine chores like these are frequently the first steps of a patient's visit to a physician's hospital or office which means the CNA is responsible for building a good impression for the whole medical team.


3. Make beds, serve meals and maintain a clean environment

In addition to fulfilling patients' fundamental requirements, a CNA tasks may include providing food to patients, assisting with room cleaning, and making beds. It also includes emptying bedpans and replacing dirty sheets. Moreover, it involves having regular contact with patients that develops compassionate interactions that may help individuals cope with disease with dignity.

4. Help in various medical operations by setting up medical equipment.

CNA duties also include setting up and as well as storing medical equipment for the next patient checkup or relocating large medical equipment between rooms CNAs with proper training can help or even perform certain medical procedures including blood drawing.

5. Respond to requests and monitor changes in a patient's behavior or condition

CNAs detect not just evident changes in a patient's physical health on a regular basis, but also the complexities of their mental state. This insight can have an immense influence on patients' ability to pass through the difficult recovery stage or come to terms with a chronic disease.

Other duties performed by CNAs are. They can assist in alleviating pain, improving patient quality of life, enhancing the quality of care that institutions can give, and preventing additional harm or accident in a variety of healthcare settings. These fields include Schools, Hospitals, surgery clinics, Hospice Care Nursing Homes; urgent care clinics, Rehab Centers, and Women's Health Clinics. This variety demonstrates the impact and necessity of CNAs, as everyday skilled CNAs provide care to millions of individuals. Without them, many of these institutions would be unable to provide the level of care on which we rely for ourselves and our loved ones.

On the other hand, nurses perform other duties. For example, nurses keep track and evaluate patient medical data, such as vital medical history, symptoms, and vital signs. They also administer medications and treatment to the patients. Nurses assist medical professionals and physicians in developing patient care plans. They also conduct and analyze results. Nurses are superior, they mentor or manage other nursing members such as home health aides, nursing aides, health assistants, caregivers, and helping patients. They also help in developing long-term health care plans. Nurses also collaborate with senior consultants and medical personnel to determine the most appropriate course of therapy for patients based on their present health status and medical history



Job outlook and salary of CNA

CNAs are critical to the healthcare industry in the United States. Indeed, the country is in desperate need of CNAs right now, with industry analysts forecasting that demand for certified nursing assistants would increase by 9% by 2028.

Nationally, the average salary for a certified nursing assistant is $28,540 per year or around $13.72 per hour. However, CNA wages vary by state and experience level.

Job outlook and salary of a registered nurse

The average income for a certified RN is $73,550 annually or $35.36 per hour. As nurses acquire experience, they earn more as an RN—and career prospects for registered nurses are great due to increased demand.

Whenever we think about staff in hospitals, we always have the opinion that there are only nurses and doctors. We often ignore the helping staff that does the majority of work and are paid less. Hospital empowers nurses and doctors, give them priorities and bonuses due to their qualification rather than their work. There is no doubt that doctors also do the majority of work but there is another nursing staff that is given priority over CNA. Nurses are preferred over CNA due to their degrees. In reality, the whole burden of each floor is transferred down to a single assigned CNA as they make direct contact with the patients. Therefore, it is the duty of the hospital, to treat everyone equally. CNA's have the right to, they should not be overlooked or degraded.



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