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Certified Medication Technician

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Do any of you know much about these? They keep going on and on about it in my CNA class. I guess the state of North Carolina will be listing the position on the NC Board of Nursing next year. The instructors seem to think that a lot of opportunities and job openings will be avaliable to them.

Learn the skills and information you will need to take the state Med Tech Exam.
Our Med Tech class includes instruction on:

Safe medication administration
Proper infection control
Medical Terminology
Physician orders & transcribing
Medication monitoring techniques
Methods to monitor RX effects/side effects/adverse reactions
Proper storage of medications
Proper documentation procedures
Reference/resources in Rx administration.

I'm just wondering is this is something that's being "hyped up". Or if this will be a more common job.
There are lots of varying opinions on this subject. Read this thread, please, for some insight:http://allnurses.com/forums/showthread.php?t=100772You will see what I mean if you read the posts there. Personally, as an RN, I think it's a terrible idea. I already said why in the other thread.

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This is not by any means a "done deal." There is great opposition to this proposed very dangerous legislation here in North Carolina.Please refer to this thread also:http://allnurses.com/forums/showthread.php?t=96392

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THANK YOU SO MUCH...both of you!I will NOT be taking the class. I thought it sounded odd that a person could learn about all those meds in such a short amount of time. I guess that the CMT's here will even be allowed to give insulin injections. I know that's not a big deal, but still.I'm just now getting my CNA certification. I take my test on the 31st this month. Then I start classes back up again in the fall for the rest of my nursing pre-reqs (5 more classes!). Thanks again for the links. I will try to get a part time CNA job instead of taking the CMA class. I'm sure I'll get more "nursing" experience as a CNA also.

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You are sure to hear opinions that totally disagree with Vicky's and mine. The best thing to do is decide for yourself if you want this HUGE responsibility for information that simply CANNOT be learned in just a few days/weeks. It takes nurses years to learn the "ins and outs" of med administration. I find it a travesty that they would simply allocate this responsibility to people with a few weeks' or less, training. It's dangerous to me. But many will argue I am wrong. That is why I said, visit those threads and hear some opposing opinions. Then, form your own! Good luck to you. I wish you the best.

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Bad idea as far as im concerned.

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I work right now as a certified medication aide in the state of Texas...and some of the people's comments on here about them are very offensive to me...I dont want to hear how CMA's are bad people and we don't know how to pass medications correctly, or we are going to steal them, or whatever else negative you have to say....So I'm going to stay out of it...all i know is...it doesn't take a brain surgeon to read a MAR correctly and admin. a med....its pretty simple...nurses can make medication errors...anyways...my take on being a med aide is somewhere in one of those post....but im going to stop now before my blood starts to boil

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no one has said that med aides are "bad people", the issue is safety. Let's put it this way, when you go into the doctors office for common complaints, probably 75% of the time the RN could figure out what is wrong and know which drug needs to be used to treat the problem. This would be the case for patients with a normal presentation and hx. But what about the zebra? the person with atypical symptoms or multiple systems in stages of disease? to recognize, diagnose and treat people with abnormal presentations youwill most likely need a physician or an NP/PA. It is the same concept with medication administration. Most people can read correctly and follow directions to physically give the medication, but what about symptoms and recognizing problems that could be occuring when the patient has multiple medications? What about signs that the med is not working or is possibly causing an allergic response, etc... Now imagine knowing the risks involved with giving medications and knowing you are now responsible for another person giving meds under your license? I am not a nurse yet but, I know first hand how dangerous it can be for someone not truly qualified to take on this responsibility. It isn't about someone being a better, more honest person, it's about someone being more qualified for the job by virtue of education.

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This is exactly what the problem is with med-aides. Some feel it is nothing more than reading a piece of paper. I am a nurse in Texas and I work with all the med0aide students in our faclity during their clinical. The only thing these people know is they are pushing a med cart, there is no clue about anything in the med cart. You can give meds all day long but it is dangerous if you dont know why you giving it or what the side effects are. Some of these meds are monitored by labs and thoses lab values need to be considered before med admin. Oh I could go on all day... Read my post im sure it is in the link above... And I no one ever said you were a bad person.Quote from nicolel1182I work right now as a certified medication aide in the state of Texas...and some of the people's comments on here about them are very offensive to me...I dont want to hear how CMA's are bad people and we don't know how to pass medications correctly, or we are going to steal them, or whatever else negative you have to say....So I'm going to stay out of it...all i know is...it doesn't take a brain surgeon to read a MAR correctly and admin. a med....its pretty simple...nurses can make medication errors...anyways...my take on being a med aide is somewhere in one of those post....but im going to stop now before my blood starts to boil

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Quote from SMK1no one has said that med aides are "bad people", the issue is safety. Let's put it this way, when you go into the doctors office for common complaints, probably 75% of the time the RN could figure out what is wrong and know which drug needs to be used to treat the problem. This would be the case for patients with a normal presentation and hx. But what about the zebra? the person with atypical symptoms or multiple systems in stages of disease? to recognize, diagnose and treat people with abnormal presentations youwill most likely need a physician or an NP/PA. It is the same concept with medication administration. Most people can read correctly and follow directions to physically give the medication, but what about symptoms and recognizing problems that could be occuring when the patient has multiple medications? What about signs that the med is not working or is possibly causing an allergic response, etc... Now imagine knowing the risks involved with giving medications and knowing you are now responsible for another person giving meds under your license? I am not a nurse yet but, I know first hand how dangerous it can be for someone not truly qualified to take on this responsibility. It isn't about someone being a better, more honest person, it's about someone being more qualified for the job by virtue of education.

Comment:
Quote from nicolel1182I work right now as a certified medication aide in the state of Texas...and some of the people's comments on here about them are very offensive to me...I dont want to hear how CMA's are bad people and we don't know how to pass medications correctly, or we are going to steal them, or whatever else negative you have to say....So I'm going to stay out of it...all i know is...it doesn't take a brain surgeon to read a MAR correctly and admin. a med....its pretty simple...nurses can make medication errors...anyways...my take on being a med aide is somewhere in one of those post....but im going to stop now before my blood starts to boil

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What about the certified medical assistants?? That CMA title is going to cause alot of confusion. Or is is CMT?

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I also live in NC, and I do not think it is a good idea. I think the money they're planning on spending on it should be redirected towards training more nurse educators. I feel there is too much nursing judgement that is necessary in giving medications. I appreciate their efforts to speed up processes and try to lighten a nurses load, however, this is not the best way to do it. The NC Board of Nursing also has other things that will be voted on soon that you should check out at www.ncbon.com If you're planning on starting nursing school, getting your CNA, anything dealing with nursing, you should be checking up on this website. I too agree with another poster in that this is something I am not willing to delegate to someone else. I don't want someone giving a wrong med, missing an interaction or something of the sorts and it comes back on me. :uhoh21: NicinNC- Good luck with your test. PM me and tell me where you're planning on working. For "more nursing experience" as you put it, try a hosptial. It has opened many doors for classmates. Long term care is awesome, but I think as a nursing student you'll get a lot of experience (both are great though)! -Andrea
Author: alice  3-06-2015, 18:08   Views: 446   
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