Nursing aide jobs are typically held within nursing care facilities, hospitals, and mental health facility centers where they help take care of mentally or physically ill individuals as well as those who are disabled or weak. Generally, they work with individuals that require long-term care and so they eventually develop personal connections and positive relationships with their patients.
In the United States, nursing aides may have different specialties but are normally expected to help their patients with routine activities and personal regiments. Some of them include eating, dressing, grooming, and bathing. They are also often responsible for monitoring their patients' medical data including their temperatures, pulse rates, blood pressure levels, and respiration rates as well as their emotional, mental, and physical conditions. They report any observed changes to the nursing staff or the medical staff to whom they report.
Outlook of Nursing Aide Jobs
In 2009, nursing aides, orderlies and attendants held 1,438,010 jobs across the United States. That figure is expected to grow by about 21% to 1,745,800 by the year 2018. Because the growth rate of employment in this field is much faster than the average job in the country, job opportunities are expected to be excellent.
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