General Forums >> Ask A Nurse >> Certified Medication training for CNAs
Certified Medication training for CNAs
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Posted about 5 years ago I think its great for CNAs considering LPN or RN? Very informative educataion they can use and put toward Nursing school! http://www.dopl.utah.gov/licensing/forms/084.pdf http://www.niacc.cc.ia.us/rhec/cert_ma.pdf
A Medication Aide is trained to work under the direct supervision of a caretaker or licensed health care professional. They provide routine medication by oral, inhalation, topical and instillation routes when appropriate direction and monitoring is provided. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago
I find this to be a very frightening practice. I know that they do this a lot in California. My feelings are that only a licensed nurse should be giving medications. I do not care what the training is; a CNA will not have the classes that LPNs and RNs have. Many factors need to be considered when giving medications other than just putting the medicine in a soufflé cup and handing the meds to the patient. A few weeks of training will never cover the training that nurses have. Pharmacology, anatomy, assessment skills observing for reactions, these are only a few of the needed skills and knowledge that goes with administering medications. I know that some states are doing this as an alternative to the nursing shortage. Nurses should be raising Holy Hell about this and so should the patients. I would absolutely refuse to have anyone giving medications under my license. As an RN or an LPN you would be 100% responsible for any and every medication error made by an UAP. I did allow nursing students to give medications. This was very different. By the time nursing students were giving medications they had two years of school completed and were ready to give meds with someone watching over them. I do not care how much training is given to a medication aide, it can never come close to the training that an RN or an LPN has before they give medications. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago i know a CMA is not a Nurse. but due to Nursing shortage what can be done? should we clone new nurses lol. jk |
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| Posted about 5 years ago
The nursing shortage is a very serious problem and in some areas of the country the shortage is a real health crisis. However, cutting corners is not a solution to the problem. This practice is dangerous and should not be tolerated by nurses or the public. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago We have an assisted living facility in my area that "trains" people to give meds. They do not need to even be a CNA. These people are no more than HS graduated, some of them not even that. Their only job is to pass meds. They are called med techs. VERY SCARY!! Not suprisingly, this facility has been cited by the state numerous times and has been on the verge of shutting down completely a few times as well! |
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| Posted about 5 years ago I just posted an article under news on this subject |
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| Posted about 5 years ago I see this more of a way for hospitals and LTCs to cut costs than to be concerned with the nursing shortage. Sure is much cheaper to hire someone that has not even finished HS than to hire enough LPNs or RNs to give meds. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago Wow. Dangerous, if you ask me. A 60-hour course does not begin to approach necessary competency for medication administration. Remember that a nurse retains responsibility for all tasks he or she delegates - that means if an unlicensed person administers a medication incorrectly, under the wrong parameters, inappropriately - even if the tech doesn't realize that they've made an error, the nurse is responsible for the medication error and is hanging out in the wind. 60 hours is nowhere near enough time to teach adequate pharmacology, anatomy, physiology, assessment, and clinical judgement enough to know when to give a med, when to hold a med, or sometimes even when to ask. Setting aside the liability issue, a few points come immediately to mind - 1) We are all supposed to be patient advocates first. That means we do what is in the best interest of the patient, all the time. Can you honestly tell me that you would feel competent to administer medications after a 60 hour certification course and a CNA certificate? Because I wouldn't. No way. I've pushed medications prehospital that RN's cannot push in a hospital setting - but I wouldn't perform a med pass until I had been signed off, tested, and confident as a second-year RN student. The difference is that as a medic I had two years of training, including training in specific prehospital meds, when to give them and when not to, and what they can do - and even then, it was limited. I learned a whole lot more about the meds I had been giving in the field, and their long-term effects, half-lives, and indications and contraindications in Nursing school than I even did in Medic school. It's a different scope of practice. Not selling anybody's current profession short by any means - I'm a fierce advocate for CNAs, EMTs, and techs - just pointing out that each profession has a role and a scope of practice - and this seems way, WAY outside.
2) This proviso - " MACs may not administer any medication which requires nursing assessment or judgment prior to administration, evaluation, or follow-up," in the definition of the scope of practice, nullifies the usefulness of the position. What medications do we give that DON'T require nursing assessment prior to administration? Or that DON'T require nursing evaluation or follow-up? Cause if you ain't assessing, evaluating, and following up your medication administrations - I don't want you as my nurse or my family's nurse! 3) I don't know about "cloning new nurses" to ease the nursing shortage. What I do know is that you don't fix a problem, like a nursing shortage, by lowering standards. That's a bad idea for our profession, and for our patients.
Ted "The smallest minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities." - Ayn Rand |
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| Posted about 5 years ago But these facilities need to think about the liability they are placing on themselves and the danger to their patients. Yeah, it is not one of the hardest nursing skills to learn to pass meds, but knowing the side effects and adverse reactions or drug interactions is a skill that is necessary to possess. It is fundamental and learned in nursing school!! |
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| Posted about 5 years ago I absolutely agree 100% with cd, tdage and shan. And I'm going out on a limb here and going to hurt some professional and personal feelings. I'm not comfortable either with LPN/LVN's passing meds. Ultimately, it's the RN license on the line. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago dmaze. LPNS are really very capable of passing meds. They truly get more training on meds than RNs. I went throuhg both schools. I was very disappointed in my RN pharm class after what I had as an LPN. There is no way every for any one with less training than that to even give an ASA. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago Ted: great post. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago cdnurse says ...
Maybe it's the difference in many years from your experience and mine. Back in the 70's where I went to school we had ongoing extensive pharm. courses. My point was actually, it's my license or any RN's license on the line when other's pass meds who are not RN's. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago I have emailed several people about this topic . I sure hope we get some disucssion going on this. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago deb: yes you are correct, it is the nurse whose license is on the line. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago Medication administration is an awesome responsibility & would be VERY dangerous for a UAP without the proper supervision. As an LPN, I still don't feel completely comfortable passing meds in LTC. So many residents with so many varied diagnosises, diets, & sensitivities. I don't have the time to pass the meds myself, though. All the meds are reviewed by the pharmacy consultants monthly. Also, they are checked in & approved by a nurse before being placed in the med carts. I like to discuss any new meds with my med aids before administration & provide any necessary information. Afterall, it is my license as well as their certification & my resident's safety on the line. I suppose I'm fortunate to have med aids that take their responsibility very seriously. At my facility during the last state inspection there were more errors in the nurses' MARs than in the med aids MARs most consisting of failure to initial routine meds & none resultin in injury. I'm very proud of my med aids. They are my eyes & ears on the floor. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago My in-laws have a business taking care of disabled persons. My step-mother in law is a License Vocational Nurse. She has a Medication Aides to help her out, I think she has this set up, so she wouldn't have pay a licenses nurse to give medications. She do have a Register Nurse helping her out. This is in California too!!!! I am a proud mother of three beautyful daughter. I currently live in Los Angeles California. I've worked as a heathecare provider for almost 10 years. I am curently in school to pursue my MSN in nursing, and wants to work as a pediactric nurse, in public health. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago As an LPN I have given meds both IV and po without one med error in 30yrs. I have had to bail out several RN's who were tripping over their ego...... Everyday is a gift. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago I have worked in states where MED.TECHS are used....horrible.We are putting lives at jeopardy with this. CDNURSE...I agree with you Dmaze??? whoever passes the meds whether it be an RN or LPN/LVN's license is responsible if an error is made..I do not ever agree with this practice of med techs..never have and never will but it is one way to cut costs....at the risk of lives.....:( Drew |
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| Posted about 5 years ago I remember when I worked in a Retire and Care Center, they had two people that help with Medication assistance, that were CNA's, the RN Supervisor would make her rounds, to see if the medicationss were given at a certain time, and to check on the CNA / Medtech on the assistive living portion of the facility, on the SNF, the LVN or the RN passed medications.The facility kept it on a downlow, and only these two people were qualified to assist the residents with medications, or whom they trusted. I am a proud mother of three beautyful daughter. I currently live in Los Angeles California. I've worked as a heathecare provider for almost 10 years. I am curently in school to pursue my MSN in nursing, and wants to work as a pediactric nurse, in public health. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago Here in KY, the only real place where you find a CMA is in a nursing home. I think we do need CMA's because of shortages, BUT however, I do agree to a certain extent that it cold be dangerous since they do not have the same exact classes as an LPN or RN. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago As an RN that works in a hospital we give our own meds. We do not even use LPN's on the acute care floors. We do however have LPN's on our Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF). I would not feel comfortable letting someone else give my meds for me. When assessing patients I like to know what kind of meds they are on. I with you guys, that CNA's should not be passing meds. It is a very scary thing. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago No argument to the ongoing vibe here. One thing I would like to see in our department is the permission for our paramedics to administer certain meds. Sure, to satisfy the hospital and our confidence, they would need to pass the same exams in orientation as the nurses. In our city, outside of Life Flight, paramedics being employed in the ed's is still in its relative infancy (not quite a decade). Working side-by-side with another critical thinker with years of street experience is a good feeling, even if their scope of practice is muted by hospital administration. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago RNDude: the situation with paramedics is different. They have intensive medical training. I would feel comfortable with a paramedic giving meds, no problem! It's the med techs that have little to no training that I am worried about. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago I agree with vwoods!!!! Here in KY, the only real place where you find a CMA is in a nursing home. I think we do need CMA's because of shortages |
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| Posted about 5 years ago And RN dude i agree with you too! paramedic giving meds is a great idea as well! |
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| Posted about 5 years ago "Dmazement" i TOTALLY DIAGREE WITH THIS STATEMENT: "And I'm going out on a limb here and going to hurt some professional and personal feelings. I'm not comfortable either with LPN/LVN's passing meds. Ultimately, it's the RN license on the line".
* Just as CDNURSE stated: LPNS are really very capable of passing meds. They truly get more training on meds than RNs. I went throuhg both schools.
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| Posted about 5 years ago Well, here in Va. they use Med techs on a regular basis (less pay, more scarey) In fact. in alot of nursing homes, med tech are replacing the LPNs. I worked at an Assisted Living facility and was replaced by a Med tech. It scares me to death to think about this. They get a short class on passing of meds, but like someone said, they have no knowledge of adverse side effects. reasons for giving or not giving meds, when a MD should be notified or numerous other concerns that should be considered for patient safety.( Giving insullin is especially frightening). As far as Lpns giving meds, that is a big part of our nursing education. I currently work with a RN who has never given an injection, in school or out. I also interviewed for a position in a LTC where I would be Charge Nurse over a CNA giving meds. I DON'T THINK SO! I'm not putting my license on the line for somebody else and if I have to go behind them and check everything, I might as well be doing it myself. I refused the postion. I have worked as LPN in LTC where the passing of medications is a time consuming and difficult job. I couldn't imagine a CNA or Med tech doing it and what about the consequences. I was constantly double checking everything. Too much chance of mistakes being made with so much going on and so many distractions. It's all about the money. But it should be all about the patient's safety. In LTC anything and everything can happen and usually does. |
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| Posted about 5 years ago MD1NURSING says ...
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| Posted about 5 years ago I teach new employee orientation for our healthcare system. CNAs are not allowed to dispense meds at any of our facilities, including long term care or assisted living. I have heard horror stories from CNAs who have been required to do so elsewhere and the sigh of relief when they find out won't be responsible for passing medications. We have to stop using the nursing shortage as our excuse to place assistive personnel in roles beyond their comfort level , training or scope of practice. If the nursing shortage is the problem... EVERY nurse has a responsibility to make nursing a more attractive profession. WE can start this by speaking positively about nursing to everyone, especially our assistive personnel. CNAs tell me how frequently nurses try to talk them out of going into nursing. I also believe that LPNs are an indispensible part of the healthcare team. We couldn't survive in Florida without them.
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LPN/LVN's are VERY capabale of passing Meds and you should feel comforatble with them passing Meds!