
Medical Assistants In High Demand : Looking
for a new career in the health care industry? You might want
to consider becoming a medical assistant. According to the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, employment of medical
assistants is expected to grow much faster than the
average
for all occupations through the year 2012. They say that
the increasing use of medical assistants across all rapidly
growing health care industries will result in fast employment
growth for this occupation. In fact, medical assistants is
projected to be the fastest growing occupation over the
2002–12 period. The health services industry is expanding
because of technological advances in medicine, and a growing
and aging population. Due to the expansion and growth in group
practices, hospitals, medical centers, clinics, and
healthcare
facilities, many more support personnel will
be needed, especially medical assistants who will be able to
handle both administrative and clinical duties. What do
Medical Assistants do?
Medical assistants perform routine
administrative and clinical tasks. They provide much needed
daily assistance to keep the doctors, podiatrists,
chiropractors, and other health care offices running
efficiently and smoothly. Their duties will vary from office
to office, depending on the location and size of the practice
and the practitioner’s specialty. In small practices, medical
assistants usually are
generalists, who would handle both
administrative and clinical duties and report directly to an
office manager, physician, or other healthcare
practitioner.
Those in large practices tend to
specialize in a particular area, under the supervision of
department administrators. Some of the many administrative
duties performed include answering telephones, greeting
patients, updating and filing patient medical records, filling
out insurance forms, handling correspondence, scheduling
appointments, arranging for hospital admission and laboratory
services, and handling billing and bookkeeping. The clinical
duties performed would vary according to State law and may
include taking medical