The hardest job I ever had was being a certified nursing assistant. The job of a nurse assessor is very demanding; often there is not enough staffing, so you are forced to work alone a lot of the time. This is because there is a shortage of home nurses all over the world for United States. The average certified helper earn between $7 and $10 per shift in a nursing home.
Working as a certified nursing assistant is often a very unsatisfying job, almost as if the residents will become numbers in their daily routine. When you have eight hours and up to 10 residents on the first shift, this is assuming there are four assistants in the unit. These 10 residents, who must help you by dressing, washing every day, feeding them breakfast and lunch, I put them to sleep, you have a very little time to sit with them and make them feel human, they become the numbers that must be done; .
Finally, say that two of those 10 residents, you only need to take off their dirty clothes and give them the minimum help that leaves eight residents to get the help of a certified nurse to do the most for everyone. For these eight remaining residents, a certified nursing assistant will help feed them, attend to their changing, correct them in their wheelchairs when they lean a little too far. A certified nurse helps them transfer from bed to wheelchair, use mechanical equipment to diapers, assist with daily bathing and care for any other non-medical needs they may have. Most certified nursing assistants do not give certified nursing assistant jobs, but will accept certified nursing assistants. the resident’s temperature, blood pressure, veins, and sometimes the reading of oxygen. This and more are what a certified nursing assistant does on the first shift to earn $7 to $10 an hour.
The second shift, which usually starts at 3 p.m. There are usually three to four certified nursing assistants per unit, but often there are only two or three certified nursing assistants. This means that an average of 42 residents is split between those two to three certified nursing assistants, leaving each a very large number of residents to feed and prepare