Patient Care Assistant

Note: Completion of a TAFE SA course does not guarantee an employment outcome. Formal requirements other than educational qualifications (eg licensing, professional registration), may apply to some occupations.

Job Prospects
Strong due to a growing and aging population, with an anticipated growth rate of 18.8% over the next five years
Salary
N/A
Source
Personal Care Assistants | Jobs and Skills Australia
Brief
Employed: 42,300
Part time share: 67%
Median age: 43

TAFE SA courses that may be relevant for: Patient Care Assistant

Accredited (Award)

  • Support patients and keep hospital care running smoothly.

    As a patient care assistant, you work under the supervision of nurses and patient support managers. Your duties include cleaning, catering and orderly tasks. You move patients safely and take them to appointments and procedures. You make sure they have their medical documents and personal belongings.

    You may transfer patients from anywhere in the hospital or nursing home, including outdoor areas. You also assist in emergencies. For example, during a Code Blue you may help move a patient or staff member who has collapsed.

  • TAFE SA offers the Certificate III in Health Services Assistance relevant to this occupation.

  • In South Australia, patient care assistants are employed by most metropolitan hospitals and many regional hospitals. Job descriptions may vary slightly between health services in the metropolitan and regional areas and are dependant on the nature of the hospital, for example roles may differ in a teaching hospital compared to a secondary hospital. Patient care assistants may also find employment at nursing homes throughout the State. According to industry representatives, this is a stable workforce that experiences a relatively low turnover. Only a small number of full-time positions become available each year. Because of training opportunities, the casual staff already employed by the various health services are usually successful in applying for and gaining these positions.

    With experience and further training, patient care assistants can become enrolled nurses or registered nurses.

  • These staff also assist nurses with patient repositioning and handling, and undertake restocking duties. They also collect and deliver urgent supply items, medication, specimens and x-ray reports as required by the nursing, medical or allied health staff. Patient care assistants work under the direction and supervision of nurses and patient support services managers at all times as part of a team providing ancillary support to nursing, medical and allied health staff ensuring patients' health needs are met. According to their Enterprise Agreement, these assistants are known as Patient Care Assistants. However, depending on the service that employs them they may also be known as Hospital Services Assistants or Patient Support Assistants. In a hospital environment, patient care assistants are classified as patient support services employees.

  • Due to this being a largely service role, patient care assistants should naturally have a caring disposition. Also, being able to work in a team environment, being well organised and able to prioritise to competently handle the range of assigned duties is essential for these assistants.

    They also need to be physically fit and are able to lift heavy objects. They also must have a commitment to the rights of elderly and disabled people to live dignified lives.

  • Cleanliness is obviously a very high priority in health care services due to the variety of illnesses being treated and the risk of cross infection, particularly when patients are at greater risk. Patient care assistants clean patient and clinical equipment, and clean and make all discharge and transfer beds to accommodate patient turnaround. A patient care assistant's other cleaning duties include maintaining the cleanliness of ward areas including showers, toilets, shower chairs, commodes and shower trolleys, the removal of rubbish and linen to collection points and attending to spillages as required.

    Patient care assistants also ensure an adequate supply of non-pharmaceutical items, and restock intravenous trolleys and medical consumables to agreed levels as directed by nursing staff. Its really satisfying because you have the opportunity to help so many people but people don't realise the pressure that patient care assistants are under. The range of duties is extensive, and you must be able to follow instructions and work well as part of a team. If you haven't got great stamina then you may not be able to keep up with the demands of this job.'

    Aside from those duties already mentioned, patient care assistants also; Collect food trolleys, distribute meals to patients, and collect trays and return food trolleys back to collection points. Prepare patients' environment for meal service. Serve patients' meals and beverages. Report damaged or malfunctioning furniture or equipment to the nurse in charge. Participate in ward and team meetings.- Liaise regularly with ward nurse coordinators and patient support services managers on matters relating to workload and equipment requirements.