Career Options for Healthcare Professionals
You can better choose what you want from a healthcare job by deciding your general career path. In fact, in the article published from the hoteljobhire website with regards to the “Top Paying Careers in the Philippines in 2022,†the first on the list is the Surgeons/Doctors. So, there are a lot of career options for Healthcare Professionals. It is being categorized into three: (taken from: https://explorehealthcareers.org/career-explorer/types-health-careers/)
1. Less Courses, Faster Service. These professions give students the chance to enter the health care sector earlier so they may start making money and gaining experience right away:
- Emergency Medical Technician/Paramedic. Responds to emergencies, from someone who might be having a heart attack at home, to multiple-vehicle collisions on the freeway.
- Home Care Assistance/Aide. Assists in providing care for those who are confined to their homes or residing in residential care facilities due to physical or mental illness, injury, disability, or infirmity.
- Licensed Practical/Vocational Nurse. Directly attend to patients while being supervised by RNs or doctors.
- Dental Assistant. Helping with dental operations like extractions, crowns, and fillings. dental imprints (mouth molds) taking and pouring preparing patients for surgery. Monitoring and operating equipment.
- Pharmacy Technician. Provide patients with medications, whether on a prescription or without. assemble prescription medication. give patients and other medical personnel information.
2. Moderate Courses. These jobs can be pursued in as little as five or six years of undergraduate or graduate study:
- Athletic Trainer. Carries out athletic injury rehabilitation programs. Athletic trainers are experts in preventing, identifying, and treating diseases and injuries to the muscles and bones.
- Health Administrator. Administers hospitals and other healthcare facilities'' daily operations. All medical services must be planned and overseen by them, and they must also keep track of budgets and update patient data.
- Anesthesiologist Assistant. When required, modify or maintain the anesthetic level while administering and monitoring the anesthesia. Additionally, anesthesiologist assistants could help with laboratory tasks including taking blood and running assays.
- Art Therapist. Integrates the fields of human development, visual arts and the creative process with models of counseling and psychotherapy.
- Cardiovascular Technologist. Works in a cardiac cath lab and performs very complex procedures, including stent implants, cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators and other tests to diagnose heart disease. They take emergency calls and participate in saving the lives of those who are having a heart attack.
3. Advanced Courses. You have the motivation, inclination, and chance to dedicate yourself to graduate-level or doctoral study. If this describes you, take a look at these professions:
- Osteopathic Physician. Practice in all areas of medicine, including general practice, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, emergency medicine, psychiatry, and surgery.
- Biostatistician. Analyzes biomarker analyses, safety reports, and other facets of clinical trial monitoring. Develops, programs, manages, and maintains sophisticated statistical databases, as well as plans and documents the layout of computer data files and conducts or oversees data entry.
- Audiologist. Identify, assess and manage disorders of hearing, balance and other neural systems.
- Dentist. Cares for the oral health, teeth, and gums of patients. They offer a variety of services. Dentists fix broken teeth, fill cavities, get rid of decay, straighten teeth, apply sealants, polish patients'' teeth, and give oral hygiene advice.
- Naturopathic Physician. Diagnose, manage, and treat patients with both acute and long-term diseases, while addressing illness and dysfunction at the levels of the body, mind, and spirit.
Don''t be afraid if you do take courses in line with medicines, healthcares and the likes because there are opportunities to be landed a job for.
Better to explore Health Careers then…
1. Less Courses, Faster Service. These professions give students the chance to enter the health care sector earlier so they may start making money and gaining experience right away:
- Emergency Medical Technician/Paramedic. Responds to emergencies, from someone who might be having a heart attack at home, to multiple-vehicle collisions on the freeway.
- Home Care Assistance/Aide. Assists in providing care for those who are confined to their homes or residing in residential care facilities due to physical or mental illness, injury, disability, or infirmity.
- Licensed Practical/Vocational Nurse. Directly attend to patients while being supervised by RNs or doctors.
- Dental Assistant. Helping with dental operations like extractions, crowns, and fillings. dental imprints (mouth molds) taking and pouring preparing patients for surgery. Monitoring and operating equipment.
- Pharmacy Technician. Provide patients with medications, whether on a prescription or without. assemble prescription medication. give patients and other medical personnel information.
2. Moderate Courses. These jobs can be pursued in as little as five or six years of undergraduate or graduate study:
- Athletic Trainer. Carries out athletic injury rehabilitation programs. Athletic trainers are experts in preventing, identifying, and treating diseases and injuries to the muscles and bones.
- Health Administrator. Administers hospitals and other healthcare facilities'' daily operations. All medical services must be planned and overseen by them, and they must also keep track of budgets and update patient data.
- Anesthesiologist Assistant. When required, modify or maintain the anesthetic level while administering and monitoring the anesthesia. Additionally, anesthesiologist assistants could help with laboratory tasks including taking blood and running assays.
- Art Therapist. Integrates the fields of human development, visual arts and the creative process with models of counseling and psychotherapy.
- Cardiovascular Technologist. Works in a cardiac cath lab and performs very complex procedures, including stent implants, cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators and other tests to diagnose heart disease. They take emergency calls and participate in saving the lives of those who are having a heart attack.
3. Advanced Courses. You have the motivation, inclination, and chance to dedicate yourself to graduate-level or doctoral study. If this describes you, take a look at these professions:
- Osteopathic Physician. Practice in all areas of medicine, including general practice, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, emergency medicine, psychiatry, and surgery.
- Biostatistician. Analyzes biomarker analyses, safety reports, and other facets of clinical trial monitoring. Develops, programs, manages, and maintains sophisticated statistical databases, as well as plans and documents the layout of computer data files and conducts or oversees data entry.
- Audiologist. Identify, assess and manage disorders of hearing, balance and other neural systems.
- Dentist. Cares for the oral health, teeth, and gums of patients. They offer a variety of services. Dentists fix broken teeth, fill cavities, get rid of decay, straighten teeth, apply sealants, polish patients'' teeth, and give oral hygiene advice.
- Naturopathic Physician. Diagnose, manage, and treat patients with both acute and long-term diseases, while addressing illness and dysfunction at the levels of the body, mind, and spirit.
Don''t be afraid if you do take courses in line with medicines, healthcares and the likes because there are opportunities to be landed a job for.
Better to explore Health Careers then…