BackJob Seeker HomeJob Seeker OptionsJob SearchPrint This Page
Job Seeker Live Help
Saturday November 7, 2009
 
 
Keywords:

Article title or keywords
Category:

Select an article category
Article Search Directory

Surgical Technology: It's Not Just For Nurses Anymore!

Posted By: Reba Hoffman In: Healthcare & Medical
If you are an adrenaline junkie, Surgical Technology may be the right career for you!
Surgical Technology: It’s Not Just For Nurses Any More

If you think that Florence Nightingale’s great, great grand nurse is standing beside the doctor while he removes your inflamed appendix, think again. Bodies aren’t the only things opening up in the OR. Jobs are too!

Surgical Technology is one of the most rapidly growing careers in healthcare. Many technical schools and career colleges are now offering this specific training. Twelve to eighteen months of classroom instruction, coupled with hands-on clinical skill development can land you right in the middle of a very exciting place: The Operating Room—ala pass the scalpel please.

Luis Melendez, CST, CSA, has been a surgical technologist for many years. He began his journey while in the military. Today he not only stands on-call for several local trauma centers, he serves as the surgical technologist program director for a career college in his locale. He offers the following to anyone contemplating a new direction. Take his Surg Tech test and see if it’s right for you.

Five major benefits that a ST candidate/graduate may consider would be: (In my opinion)

1. If you are an adrenaline junkie….you [would be] in the right profession
2. If you like to get paid for carrying a pager and, in the middle of the night, go from being sound asleep to a crash c-section in the blink of an eye or less…… you [would be] in the right profession.
3. If you like a front "seat" (though you'll most likely be standing) to the wonders of the human body, with all its fluids and smells, you like it!.....you [would be] in the right profession.
4. If you would like the privilege to go through the doors that read "Authorized Personnel Only/ Surgical Attire Required"…you [would be] in the right profession.
5. If you want to develop the thickness of your skin and not take anything personal, because you may have been mistreated, but you know you made a difference in someone's life….you [have chosen] the right profession.

So while you’re watching the commercials on TV while you’re getting ready to go to an unrewarding job, where you’re underpaid, underappreciated, think of how you’d look in surgical green. Take off the mask you’ve had to wear to get through the day and trade it for a surgical one. You’ll like what you see and will be helping people live. And you know, it doesn’t get much better than that!

Comments
Posted by: Alane
I've been in healthcare for almost 30 years and have BSN and a Masters in Healthcare Administration. I find less and less to recommend a healthcare related job, particularly in a hospital setting.  Between 1977 and 2006 wages have increased in the ER (a high risk area, said to pay better in comparison with floor nursing) from $8/hr to $28/hr on the average, which is well below the 30 year national average for other jobs with similar qualification, and the costs to acquire a nursing education are well over 300%+ higher.  There is little willingness by hospitals to staff adequately, leaving RNs high and dry in terms of completing almost every aspect of patient care with very little help. I don't know 1 RN with 5+ years experience that does not have back,neck or other skeleto-muscular problems due to few available ancillary personnel to assist with delivery of physical care. Call is more frequent, hours are now 12-14 hr shifts, not an 8 hr day--mandatory continuing education is very expensive and often not reimbursed. Even a 40 hour/week job barely produces a living wage for a family of 3 with someone that has my education and experience. Medical care is imploding and our healthcare 'system' in the US is in dire difficulty because people like me are leaving for positions that pay us what we are worth with less stress, better hours, no 'on-call', gentler physical requirements, no ongoing licensing and educational expenses and that acknowledge our abilities and contributions--which rarely occurs in any meaningful way in a hospital.  Medical professionals are also famous for 'eating their own' and staff are not very supportive of one another.  It's a dog eat dog world and in 30 years, I have had a variety of jobs, responsibilities, management positions and the experience to know of what I speak.  I still love many aspects of the work itself, but could never recommend the conditions in which I have to do it. I travel and find this is true from Hawaii to Florida.  Sorry for presenting an opinion that many will see as negative, and some will call it burn out, but that is not the case. I've taken breaks along the way specifically to avoid that issue.  It is the future of medicine, hospital and clinic care, private medicine, etc. that is the more important issue. I recommend everyone who reads this, return to the article by the author above and re-read Item #5 - because that will happen to you every day and the 'warm fuzzies' you get telling yourself you are making a difference don't help you lift an average 500-1000#/day over 13 hours, it doesnt give you a meal or bathroom break, it doesn't help you with tons of paper or computer work and and doesn't pay you when you go to a deposition when someone sues - and they do sue - despite our good intentions and best efforts in a very tightly wound, hard hitting, tough job. So strap on your armour ladies and gentlemen and get ready if you go into healthcare. And don't say you weren't given the skinny ahead of time.  This is my first blog EVER and that's because I feel it's important to give those who are thinking of healthcare an acurate picture of the condition of the profession in 2006.
Posted by: diondra sams
This is a very good article; it has every answer for a question a surgical tech would ask.
Posted by: Jacob Frantz
I am considering a career as a surgery tech. As a mid life change..am looking for tips, or any other information..about what to expect..what should i expect to pay for training to get certificate and where are the best places to get it...
Posted by: d sager
As someone looking into this field I found this article very informative. It gives a realistic picture of a career as a surgical tech. I have been doing research on many sites that give some information but not the "real picture">I also did some research on job availability in my area in California...reading the job descriptions for some give a general idea of what one would be expected to do in this role...many were very vague. Other than this article the only place I found that gave some details was on the MemorialCare Career site.
Posted by: Larisa Maji
OK Alane, it's been two years, please tell me what field you found "that pay us what we are worth with less stress, better hours, no 'on-call', gentler physical requirements, no ongoing licensing and educational expenses and that acknowledge our abilities and contributions."
Posted by: johnathon
i have a few questions to ask for a school project about the job i want and i wanted to see if you can answer them
Posted by: Luis Melendez
I am a program director in Surgical Technology. You can contact me if you have any questions.
Posted by: r
hi, i have read your articles and i agree with the first person if you are ready for all of that then the careers for you. i am a surgical tech and i hate it! you are mistreated, you are directly assisting the surgeon and you are the first person that they scream at when something goes wrong with their case and the r.n in the room depends where you qare but you find yourself doing their job for them as well. at least i do. the surgeons are whiny and are never happy. you may get one or two that you like to work with. it's very hard to please multiple personalities on a daily basis for crappy pay and are expected to know so much info and work long hours and miss out on family things cause you never know when your going to get to go home. i have only been in this 2 years and i regret going to school for it. i made the wrong choice, and now i am regretting it. i should have gone for something else and now i am trying to figure out how i can do that with my children and not being able to work so i can school full time. just being honest!  
Posted by: Jessica Wilson
I am in training to become a surgical technologist, and I can't imagine a more rewarding career with such little school time.  
Posted by: Nate
Quite simply put, don't become a Surgical Technologist. 1- As an ST you are the lowest man on the totem pole, you are one rung higher than the people mopping the floors, and at times, you are made to do that job.2- Everyone is your boss. Yes, technically the OR manager is your boss, however, everyone else towers over you in their credentials giving them the power to essentially say, do, or tell you what to do.3- Pay is crap. For the amount of information you need to know, for each case, for each doctor, its really too much information that we are supposed to be on top of. Heaven forbid if you forget something, then you and your rear end will be sore. And its not like I can justify this job with a decent pay check, to put things in perspective, I work in Maine, I made better money working at a Water Park in New Hampshire than in an OR in Maine.4- Mandatory call. Its not an option, expect 3-4 call week days a month and a solid Friday - Monday morning call week end each month. Imagine working your 40 hour shift then working your call weekend and putting in another 25 hours OT and then not being able to go home and sleep modnay, because you have to start your shift... awesome?5- You are stuck there until the cases are over. Because we work with complaintive docs who run the department (when they want to do work, they will, there is no set boundaries.) So even if you have class at night you are forced to stay there, with no relief until the case is over.6- Ever try standing straight up on a concrete floor holding retractors while being sterile and having to pee? Ever done that for 8-10 hours? Ever cramp so bad that you want to sit, but you can't for your entire shift? Welcome to your reality as a Tech. OR nurses are a joke too, they sit down, fill out their paperwork, and play sudoku all day until they get bored and want to harass you. I would avoid this job at all costs. Vet Tech's, X-Ray Techs, Phlebotomists are all other options I would choose. You get better pay and better hours.
Posted by: K Bertrand  
'A day in the Life'of a ST piece would help sell the specialty.  It's often difficult to get an informational interview with people in the industry, not only because they're busy but because they aren't always easily identified from a roster.  Many 'sales' articles from schools don't address the downsides or special attributes required or on the job stresses for fear of losing enrollees with the truth.  However, "A day in the life" will help prepare and provide focus for those individuals who are truly suited to the specialty.  kb
Posted by: Melissa On: 9/11/2009 12:23:49 AM
Thanks, "R" and "Nate".  I was seriously thinking of going to school for ST.  I was just told by a director at my community college "not to do it".  He was married to one for twenty years and he heard all the horror stories.  He said that ST's are treated so horribly by the surgeons and everything is your fault.  Thank you, I have been looking for some honest information on this for quite some time.
Posted by: Barb On: 10/15/2009 11:52:33 AM
Well I was thinking about ST but I guess I will look for something else, thanks for info
 
Leave a comment
Please complete the form below to submit a comment on this article. A valid email address is required to submit a comment though it will not be displayed on the site.

   
 
Go to the Top © Copyright 2001-2009 JobGuru  All rights reserved.
Beyond.com Career Portal Software. © Copyright 2001-2009 Beyond.com, Inc.
Privacy Policy   Terms of Service   Job Network   Job Search   Resume Post   FAQ   Affiliates   Contact Us
Syndicated Career Content: Job Feeds via RSS/XML and Yahoo.
Powered by Beyond.com