Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Lab Technician Jobs: Becoming More Marketable

By Sharika Carlino


As a lab technician, your role is to perform a wide variety of tests and procedures on body fluids and other specimens so that physicians can make an accurate diagnosis of a patient's condition and recommend the best treatment method as well. While lab technician jobs are continuing to increase each year, improving your competency should help you get ahead of the pack.

The items listed on your resume will have a huge impact on the kind of lab technician jobs you will be qualified for in the future. Therefore, you must make a good start in your career by taking up a formal training program. While you can be lab technician by meeting the minimum requirements, you can go further with your career by acquiring either an associate's degree or a bachelor's degree.

There are also a lot of institutions and facilities on which you can acquire your lab technician training, but based on statistics, more employers show preference to individuals who have completed their education under an accredited program. Enrollment in training programs accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP) can help you get bigger opportunities.

Even if you have already graduated from an accredited program, it won't really mean much if you don't apply for certification. Those who are certified by the American Medical Technologists or the Board of Registry of the American Society for Clinical Pathology will find that it is easier to come by lab technician jobs. This is because of the fact that certification implies that a person's skill meets a certain standard.

Other requirements that are common with most lab technician jobs are the skills and technical knowledge that will allow an individual to properly perform his duties and responsibilities. Therefore as a lab technician, you are expected to be good not only at problem solving and analysis, but also have excellent manual dexterity, precision, and be capable of working under pressure.

There are plenty of lab technician jobs that are found mostly in general medical and surgical hospitals, but more employment opportunities continue to abound in medical and diagnostic laboratories, doctor's offices, Federal Executive Branch, and in colleges, universities, and professional schools. Good pay is to be expected in this career although how much you earn will be influenced by several factors.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment