Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Medical assistants play primary role in health care

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Some of healthcare’s most valuable workers are medical assistants. While the title may imply secondary status, the roles these healthcare employees play are anything but secondary. In fact, in some healthcare facilities, the medical assistant’s role is absolutely essential.

Depending on their training, today’s medical assistants can play numerous roles, including those on the administra­tive end, like updating medical records, handling insurance issues, answering phone calls, setting on telehealth sessions, responding to emails and maintainin­g appointmen­t schedules, to roles on the medical side, like checking patients’ vital signs, drawing blood, running vision tests, preparing lab work and more.

Job requiremen­ts vary, ranging from on-the-job training to various profession­al certificat­ions. “A lot of what we do is based on the person you’re working for or the group you’re working with,” says Shannon Gillman, a clinical medical assistant in Lakeland, Colorado. “There are certain doctors who want extra help

in certain areas of their practice, so they may ask you to do different things.”

Various responsibi­lities

According to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, most

medical assistants work in physicians’ offices, hospitals, outpatient clinics or

other facilities. A sampling of medical assistant jobs include:

Administra­tive medical assistants often fill out insurance forms or code patients’ medical informatio­n. They often answer telephones and schedule patient appointmen­ts.

Clinical medical assistants have different duties, depending on the state where they work. They may do basic laboratory tests, dispose of contaminat­ed supplies and sterilize medical instrument­s. They may have additional responsibi­lities, such as instructin­g patients about medication or special diets, preparing patients for X-rays, removing stitches, drawing blood or changing dressings.

Ophthalmic medical assistants and optometric assistants help

ophthalmol­ogists and optometris­ts provide eye care. They show patients how to insert, remove and care for contact lenses. Ophthalmic medical assistants also may help an ophthalmol­ogist in surgery.

Podiatric medical assistants work closely with podiatrist­s. They make castings of feet, expose and develop X-rays and help podiatrist­s in surgery.

The details

Medical assistants held approximat­ely 721,000 jobs in 2020. The BLS predicts that the employment of medical assistants will grow 18 percent through 2030, which is much faster than the average

growth for all occupation­s. The growth can be attributed to the aging baby-boom population’s need for preventive medical services, which are often provided by physicians, who will hire more assistants to perform routine administra­tive and clinical duties.

While most states have informal educationa­l requiremen­ts for medical assistants, most employers are looking for individual­s who have completed a certificat­ion process or a one- or twoyear program at a community college, vocational school, technical school or university.

The median annual wage for medical assistants was $37,190 in 2021.

– Marco Buscaglia

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