Colorado Nursing Schools - Nursing, Psychiatric, and Home Health Aides

Nursing Aides

Nature of the Work

Nursing and psychiatric aides help care for physically or mentally ill, injured, disabled, or infirm individuals confined to hospitals, nursing care facilities, and mental health settings. Home health aides have duties that are similar, but they work in patients' homes or residential care facilities.

Nursing aides - also known as nursing assistants, certified nursing assistants, geriatric aides, unlicensed assistive personnel, orderlies, or hospital attendants - perform routine tasks under the supervision of nursing and medical staff. They answer patients' call lights; deliver messages; serve meals; make beds; and help patients to eat, dress, and bathe. Aides also may provide skin care to patients; take their temperature, pulse rate, respiration rate, and blood pressure; and help them to get into and out of bed and walk. They also may escort patients to operating and examining rooms, keep patients' rooms neat, set up equipment, store and move supplies, and assist with some procedures. Aides observe patients' physical, mental, and emotional conditions and report any change to the nursing or medical staff.

Nursing aides employed in nursing care facilities often are the principal caregivers, having far more contact with residents than do other members of the staff. Because some residents may stay in a nursing care facility for months or even years, aides develop ongoing relationships with them and interact with them in a positive, caring way.

Home health aides help elderly, convalescent, or disabled persons live in their own homes instead of in a health care facility. Under the direction of nursing or medical staff, they provide health-related services, such as administering oral medications. Like nursing aides, home health aides may check patients' pulse rate, temperature, and respiration rate; help with simple prescribed exercises; keep patients' rooms neat; and help patients to move from bed, bathe, dress, and groom. Occasionally, they change nonsterile dressings, give massages and alcohol rubs, or assist with braces and artificial limbs. Experienced home health aides also may assist with medical equipment such as ventilators, which help patients breathe.

Most home health aides work with elderly or disabled persons who need more extensive care than family or friends can provide. Some help discharged hospital patients who have relatively short-term needs.

In home health agencies, a registered nurse, physical therapist, or social worker usually assigns specific duties to and supervises home health aides, who keep records of the services they perform and record each patient's condition and progress. The aides report changes in a patient's condition to the supervisor or case manager.

Psychiatric aides, also known as mental health assistants or psychiatric nursing assistants, care for mentally impaired or emotionally disturbed individuals. They work under a team that may include psychiatrists, psychologists, psychiatric nurses, social workers, and therapists. In addition to helping patients to dress, bathe, groom themselves, and eat, psychiatric aides socialize with them and lead them in educational and recreational activities.

Psychiatric aides may play games such as cards with the patients, watch television with them, or participate in group activities, such as sports or field trips. They observe patients and report any physical or behavioral signs that might be important for the professional staff to know. They accompany patients to and from examinations and treatment. Because they have such close contact with patients, psychiatric aides can have a great deal of influence on their patients' outlook and treatment.

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Working Conditions

Most full-time aides work about 40 hours a week, but, because patients need care 24 hours a day, some aides work evenings, nights, weekends, and holidays. Many work part time. Nursing aides spend many hours standing and walking, and they often face heavy workloads. Aides must guard against back injury because they may have to move patients into and out of bed or help them to stand or walk. Aides also may face hazards from minor infections and major diseases, such as hepatitis, but can avoid infections by following proper procedures.

Nursing aides often have unpleasant duties, such as emptying bedpans and changing soiled bed linens. The patients they care for may be disoriented, irritable, or uncooperative. Psychiatric aides must be prepared to care for patients whose illness may cause violent behavior. While their work can be emotionally demanding, many aides gain satisfaction from assisting those in need.

Home health aides may go to the same patient's home for months or even years. However, most aides work with a number of different patients, each job lasting a few hours, days, or weeks. Home health aides often visit multiple patients on the same day.

Home health aides generally work alone, with periodic visits from their supervisor. They receive detailed instructions explaining when to visit patients and what services to perform. Aides are individually responsible for getting to patients' homes, and they may spend a good portion of the working day traveling from one patient to another. Because mechanical lifting devices available in institutional settings are seldom available in patients' homes, home health aides are particularly susceptible to injuries resulting from overexertion when they assist patients.

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Training, Other Qualifications, and Advancement

In many cases, a high school diploma or equivalent is necessary for a job as a nursing or psychiatric aide. However, a high school diploma generally is not required for jobs as home health aides. Hospitals may require previous experience as a nursing aide or home health aide. Nursing care facilities often hire inexperienced workers, who must complete a minimum of 75 hours of mandatory training and pass a competency evaluation as part of a State-approved training program within 4 months of their employment. Aides who complete the program are known as certified nurse assistants (CNA) and are placed on the State registry of nursing aides. Some States also require psychiatric aides to complete a formal training program. However, most psychiatric aides learn their skills on the job from experienced workers.

Nursing and psychiatric aide training is offered in high schools, vocational-technical centers, some nursing care facilities, and some community colleges. Courses cover body mechanics, nutrition, anatomy and physiology, infection control, communication skills, and resident rights. Personal care skills, such as how to help patients to bathe, eat, and groom themselves, also are taught.

Some employers provide classroom instruction for newly hired aides, while others rely exclusively on informal on-the-job instruction by a licensed nurse or an experienced aide. Such training may last from several days to a few months. Aides also may attend lectures, workshops, and in-service training.

The Federal Government has guidelines for home health aides whose employers receive reimbursement from Medicare. Federal law requires home health aides to pass a competency test covering a wide range of areas: Communication; documentation of patient status and care provided; reading and recording of vital signs; basic infection-control procedures; basic bodily functions; maintenance of a healthy environment; emergency procedures; physical, emotional, and developmental characteristics of patients; personal hygiene and grooming; safe transfer techniques; normal range of motion and positioning; and basic nutrition.

A home health aide may receive training before taking the competency test. Federal law suggests at least 75 hours of classroom and practical training, supervised by a registered nurse. Training and testing programs may be offered by the employing agency but must meet the standards of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services. State regulations for training programs vary.

The National Association for Home Care offers national certification for home health aides. The certification is a voluntary demonstration that the individual has met industry standards. Some States also require aides to be licensed.

Aides must be in good health. A physical examination, including State-regulated tests such as those for tuberculosis, may be required. A criminal background check also is usually required for employment.

Applicants should be tactful, patient, understanding, emotionally stable, and dependable and should have a desire to help people. They also should be able to work as part of a team, have good communication skills, and be willing to perform repetitive, routine tasks. Home health aides should be honest and discreet, because they work in private homes. They also will need access to their own car or public transportation to reach patients' homes.

For some individuals, these occupations serve as entry-level jobs, as in the case of high school and college students who may work while also attending school. In addition, experience as an aide can help individuals decide whether to pursue a career in health care. Opportunities for advancement within these occupations are limited. Aides generally need additional formal training or education in order to enter other health occupations. The most common health care occupations for former aides are licensed practical nurse, registered nurse, and medical assistant.

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Employment

Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides held about 2.1 million jobs in 2004. Nursing aides held the most jobs—approximately 1.5 million. Home health aides held roughly 624,000 jobs and psychiatric aides held about 59,000 jobs. Around 42 percent of nursing aides worked in nursing care facilities, and another 27 percent worked in hospitals. Most home health aides (about 34 percent) were employed by home health care services. Others were employed in nursing and residential care facilities and social assistance agencies. Around 54 percent of all psychiatric aides worked in hospitals, primarily in psychiatric and substance abuse hospitals, although some also worked in the psychiatric units of general medical and surgical hospitals. Others were employed in State government agencies; residential mental retardation, mental health, and substance abuse facilities; outpatient care centers; and nursing care facilities.

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Job Outlook

Numerous job openings for nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides will arise from a combination of fast employment growth and high replacement needs. High replacement needs in this large occupation reflect modest entry requirements, low pay, high physical and emotional demands, and lack of opportunities for advancement. For these same reasons, many people are unwilling to perform the kind of work required by the occupation, limiting the number of entrants. Many aides also leave the occupation to attend training programs for other health care occupations. Therefore, persons who are interested in, and suited for, this work should have excellent job opportunities.

Overall employment of nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides is projected to grow much faster than average for all occupations through the year 2014, although individual occupational growth rates will vary. Home health aides is expected to be the fastest growing occupation, as a result of both growing demand for home services from an aging population and efforts to contain costs by moving patients out of hospitals and nursing care facilities as quickly as possible. Consumer preference for care in the home and improvements in medical technologies for in-home treatment also will contribute to much-faster-than-average employment growth for home health aides.

Nursing aide employment will not grow as fast as home health aide employment, largely because nursing aides are concentrated in slower growing nursing care facilities and hospitals. Employment of nursing aides is expected to grow faster than average for all occupations through 2014, in response to the long-term care needs of an increasing elderly population. Financial pressures on hospitals to discharge patients as soon as possible should boost admissions to nursing care facilities. As a result, job opportunities will be more numerous in nursing and residential care facilities than in hospitals. Modern medical technology also will drive demand for nursing aides because, as the technology saves and extends more lives, it increases the need for long-term care provided by aides.

Employment of psychiatric aidesthe smallest of the three occupations—is expected to grow more slowly than average for all occupations. Most psychiatric aides currently work in hospitals, but most job growth will be in residential mental health facilities and in home health care agencies. There is a long-term trend toward treating mental health patients outside of hospitals because it is more cost effective and allows patients to live more normal lives. Demand for psychiatric aides in residential facilities will rise in response to growth in the number of older persons—many of whom will require mental health services—but also as an increasing number of mentally disabled adults, who were formerly cared for by their elderly parents, seek care. Job growth also could be affected by changes in government funding of programs for the mentally ill.

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Earnings

Median hourly earnings of nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants were $10.09 in May 2004. The middle 50 percent earned between $8.59 and $12.09 an hour. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $7.31, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $14.02 an hour. Median hourly earnings in the industries employing the largest numbers of nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants in May 2004 were as follows:

Employment services
$11.29
Local government
$11.10
General medical and surgical hospitals
$10.44
Nursing care facilities
$9.86
Community care facilities for the elderly
$9.56

 

Nursing and psychiatric aides in hospitals generally receive at least 1 week of paid vacation after 1 year of service. Paid holidays and sick leave, hospital and medical benefits, extra pay for late-shift work, and pension plans also are available to many hospital employees and to some nursing care facility employees.

Median hourly earnings of home health aides were $8.81 in May 2004. The middle 50 percent earned between $7.52and $10.38an hour. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $6.52, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $12.32an hour. Median hourly earnings in the industries employing the largest numbers of home health aides in May 2004 were as follows:

Nursing care facilities
$9.11
Residential mental retardation, mental health, substance abuse facilities
$8.97
Home health care services
$8.57
Community care facilities for the elderly
$8.57
Individual and family services
$8.47

 

Home health aides receive slight pay increases with experience and added responsibility. Usually, they are paid only for the time worked in the home, not for travel time between jobs. Most employers hire only on-call hourly workers and provide no benefits.

Median hourly earnings of psychiatric aides were $11.19 in May 2004. The middle 50 percent earned between $9.09and $14.09 an hour. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $7.63, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $16.74an hour. Median hourly earnings in the industries employing the largest numbers of psychiatric aides in May 2004 were as follows:

General medical and surgical hospitals
$11.31
Psychiatric and substance abuse hospitals
$11.06
Residential mental retardation, mental health, substance abuse facilities
$9.37

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Related Occupations

Nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides help people who need routine care or treatment. So do childcare workers, licensed practical and licensed vocational nurses, medical assistants, occupational therapist assistants and aides, personal and home care aides, physical therapist assistants and aides, and registered nurses.

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COLORADO BOARD OF NURSING APPROVED CNA PROGRAMS

 

Academy of Medical & Health Science, Inc.
9411 Setting Moon Ct.
Colorado Springs, CO 80925
(719)-392-3527
Accent Learning Systems (CNA)
1450 S. Havana Suite 232
Aurora, CO 80012
(303)-696-7664
Adams City High School (CNA)
4625 E. 68th Ave
Commerce City, CO 80022
(303)-853-7831
Aims Community College (CNA)
2040 Clubhouse Drive
Greeley, CO 80632
(970)-330-8008
Aims Community College Med Prep-Alcanzar (CNA)
5401 W. 20th St.
Greeley, CO 80634
(970)-330-8008
Arapahoe Community College (CNA)
5900 S. Santa Fe Dr.
Littleton, CO 80160
(303)-797-5962
Arapahoe Douglas Career and Technical School
3784 S. Logan, Lowell Annex
Englewood, CO 80110
(303)-789-0243
Arkansas Valley Regional Medical Center (CNA)
1100 Carson Ave
La Junta, CO 81050
(719)-383-6112
Avanza Home Health Care
2901 N. Cascade
Colorado Springs, CO 80907
(719)-471-7641
Bent County Memorial Nursing Home
810 3rd St.
Las Animas, CO 81054
(719)-456-1340
Bollman Technical Education Center
9451 N. Washington St.
Thornton, CO 80229
(720)-972-5845
Boulder Technical Education Center (CNA)
6600 Arapahoe
Boulder, CO 80303
(303)-447-5588
Brighton High School Med Prep Program
270 South 8th Avenue
Brighton, CO 80601
(303)-655-4126
Brookside Inn
1297 S. Perry St.
Castle Rock, CO 81505
(303)-688-2500
Career Development Center (CNA)
1200 S. Sunset St.
Longmont, CO 80503
(303)-772-3333
Certification and Beyond
4615 N. Park Dr. Suite 200
Colorado Springs, CO 80904
(719)-262-0177
Cherrelyn Healthcare Center
5555 S. Elati St.
Littleton, CO 80120
(303)-798-8686
CollegeAmerica
Ron Quam
1385 South Colorado Blvd.
Denver CO
CollegeAmerica (CNA)
4601 S. Mason St.
Fort Collins, CO 80525
(970)-223-6060
CollegeAmerica (CNA)
4060 East Bijou St.
Colorado Springs, CO 80909
(719)-637-0600
Colorado Mountain College (CNA)
901 S. Hwy 24
Leadville, CO 80461
(719)-486-4225
Colorado Mountain College (CNA)
1330 Bob Adams Drive
Steamboat Springs, CO 80487
(970)-870-4413
Colorado Mountain College (CNA)
150 Miller Ranch Road
Edwards, CO 81632
(970)-569-2900
Colorado Mountain College/Spring Valley Ctr (CNA)
3000 County Road 114
Glenwood Springs, CO 81601
(970)-947-8251
Colorado Northwestern Community College (CNA)
50 College Drive
Craig, CO 81625
(970)-824-1119
Colorado State Veterans Nursing Home (CNA)
PO Box 1420
Rifle, CO 81650
(970)-625-0842
Columbine Health Systems (CNA)
915 Centre Ave Ste 2
Fort Collins, CO 80526
(970)-482-0198
Columbine Manor (CNA)
530 W. 16th St.
Salida, CO 81201
(719)-539-6112
Community College of Denver (CNA)
1070 Alton Wy Bldg 849
Denver, CO 80230
(303)-376-8300
Community Health Institute
4705 Paris Street
Denver, CO 80239
(303)-307-8855
Cripple Creek Rehab & Wellness Center (CNA)
PO Box 397
Cripple Creek, CO 80813
(719)-689-2931
Delta Montrose Area Vo-Tech Center (HS) (CNA)
1765 U S Hwy 50
Delta, CO 81416
(970)-874-6515
Delta Montrose Technical College (CNA)
1765 U S Hwy 50
Delta, CO 81416
(970)-874-6515
E Dene Moore Memorial Home (CNA)
PO Box 912
Rifle, CO 81650
(970)-625-1514
Eben Ezer Lutheran Care Center (CNA)
122 Hospital Rd.
Brush, CO 80723
(970)-842-2861
Emily Griffith Opportunity School - CNA
1250 Welton St.
Denver, CO 80204
(720)-423-4873
Emily Griffith Opportunity School (CNA)
1250 Welton St.
Denver, CO 80204
(720)-423-4841
Emily Griffith Opportunity School-Home Health Aide
1250 Welton St.
Denver, CO 80204
(720)-423-4841
Emily Griffith Opportunity School-Nurse Aide
1250 Welton St.
Denver, CO 80203
(720)-423-4734
Family Health West
PO Box 130
Fruita, CO 81521
(970)-858-9871
First Class Nurse Aides
1828 E. Kiowa
Colorado Springs, CO 80909
(719)-573-5955
Florence High School Med Prep
215 N. Maple
Florence, CO 81226
(719)-784-2584
Four Corners Health Care Center (CNA)
2911 Junction St.
Durango, CO 81301
(970)-247-2215
Fred N. Thomas Career Education Center (CNA)
2650 Elliot
Denver, CO 80211
(303)-964-3030
Front Range Community College Larimer
4616 S. Shields
Fort Collins, CO 80526
(970)-613-7581
Front Range Community College Larimer
4616 S. Shields
Fort Collins, CO 80526
(970)-204-8232
Front Range Community College Longmont (CNA)
2255 N. Main St. Ste 118
Longmont, CO 80501
(303)-516-8999
Front Range Community College-Westminster (CNA)
3645 W. 112th Ave.
Westminster, CO 80031
(303)-404-5261
Golden Harmony Home Health
12075 E. 47th Ave. #220
Denver, CO 80239
(303)-375-9250
Grace Manor Care Center
465 5th Street
Burlington, CO 80807
(719)-346-7512
Haxtun Hospital District/Heritage Living Center
PO Box 308
Haxtun, CO 80731
(970)-774-6123
Health Care Center at Gunnison Living Community (CNA)
1500 W. Tomichi Ave
Gunnison, CO 81230
(970)-641-0704
HealthCare Education and Training-Mediplex
8451 Pearl
Thornton, CO 80229
(303)-286-5191
Heritage Park Care Center (CNA)
1200 Village Rd
Carbondale, CO 81623
(970)-963-1500
Hidden Lake High School
7300 Lowell Blvd.
Westminster, CO 80030
(720)-542-5309
Hildebrand Care Center (CNA)
1401 Phay Ave
Canon City, CO 81212
(719)-275-8656
Holly Nursing Care Center (CNA)
PO Box 636
Holly, CO 81047
(719)-537-6555
Ideal Institute of Technology
11059 E. Bethany Dr. Ste 112
Aurora, CO 80014
(303)-751-1200
IHS at Parkmoor
3625 Parkmoor Village Dr
Colorado Springs, CO 80917
(719)-476-8686
Individual and Group Development
6090 West Vassar Way
Denver, CO 80227
(303)-986-3766
Kiowa County Hospital District
PO Box 817
Eads, CO 81036
(719)-438-5401
Life Care Center of Littleton/Aurora
1500 W. Mineral Ave.
Littleton, CO 80120
(303)-795-7300
Life Care Center of Longmont (CNA)
2451 Pratt St.
Longmont, CO 80501
(303)-776-5000
Life Care Center of Pueblo (CNA)
1702 Pine St.
Pueblo, CO 81005
(719)-564-2000
Life Choices of the Rockies, Inc.
220 SE Frontier Ave.
Cedaredge, CO 81413
(970)-856-7259
Lincoln Community Hospital & Nursing Home (CNA)
PO Box 248
Hugo, CO 80821
(719)-743-2421
Mariner Post Acute Network Colorado Springs
2438 E. Fountain Blvd.
Colorado Springs, CO 80910
(719)-799-2022
Mariner Post Acute Network Metro Area
2438 E. Fountain Blvd.
Colorado Springs, CO 80910
(719)-799-2022
Mariner Post Health Care Inc. (CNA)
850 27th Ave.
Greeley, CO 80525
(970)-494-3240
Mesa Manor Rehabilitation Center (CNA)
2901 N 12th St.
Grand Junction, CO 81506
(970)-243-7211
Miriam Education Resource (MERC) (CNA)
1901 Peoria #105
Aurora, CO 80010
(720)-324-1900
Morgan Community College Med Prep (CNA)
17800 Rd 20
Fort Morgan, CO 80701
(970)-542-3117
North Shore Health Care Facility (CNA)
1365 W. 29th St
Loveland, CO 80538
(970)-667-6111
Northeastern Junior College (CNA)
100 College Dr.
Sterling, CO 80751
(970)-521-6749
Northeastern Junior College Med Prep (CNA)
Sterling, CO 80751
(970)-521-6748
Nursing: A New Beginning
Lamar, CO 81052
(719)-336-7004
Otero Junior College (CNA)
1802 Colorado Ave
La Junta, CO 81050
(719)-384-6894
PASCO
6015 W. 16th Ave.
Denver, CO 80214
(303)-233-3122
PASCO (Spanish speaking) (CNA)
6007 W. 16th Ave
Denver, CO 80214
(303)-462-1883
Pikes Peak Care Center (CNA)
2719 N. Union Blvd.
Colorado Springs, CO 80909
(719)-636-1676
Pikes Peak Community College (CNA)
11195 Hwy 83 Box RR13
Colorado Springs, CO 80921
(719)-538-5400
Pikes Peak Community College Area Voc Program
5675 S. Academy Blvd AVP Office Box C34
Colorado Springs, CO 80906
(719)-540-7414
Pine Ridge Extended Care Center
119 Bastille Dr.
Pagosa Springs, CO 81147
(970)-731-4330
Pioneer Health Care Center (CNA)
900 S. 12th St.
Rocky Ford, CO 81067
(719)-254-3314
Prairie View Care Center (CNA)
1750 Circle Lane
Limon, CO 80828
(719)-775-9717
Professional Nurse Aide Program
301 N. Main
Pueblo, CO 81003
(719)-542-7901
Progressive Care Center Nurse Aide Program
1338 Phay
Canon City, CO 81212
(719)-285-2557
Prospect Park Living Center
555 Prospect Avenue
Estes Park, CO 80517
(970)-586-8103
Pueblo Community College (CNA)
900 W. Orman AB 154
Pueblo, CO 81004
(719)-549-3409
Reach Your Goal
2145 Washington
Canon City, CO 81212
(719)-275-2926
Red Rocks Community College (CNA)
13300 W. 6th Ave
Lakewood, CO 80228
(303)-914-6621
Reliable Home Health Services
3345 W. 38th Ave.
Denver, CO 80211
(303)-477-3636
Roaring Fork School District
504 A 27th St.
Glenwood Springs, CO 81601
(970)-384-5988
San Juan Basin Technical School (CNA)
PO Box 970
Cortez, CO 81321
(970)-565-8457
Sandhaven Nursing Care Center
205 S. 10th St.
Lamar, CO 81052
(719)-226-2323
Southeastern Colorado Area Health Ed. Ctr.
503 N. Main St. Ste 422
Pueblo, CO 81001
(719)-544-7833
Sedgwick County Hospital & Nursing Home
901 Cedar Street
Julesburg, CO 80737
(970)-474-3323
Shalom Park
14800 E. Bellview Dr.
Aurora, CO 80015
(303)-680-5000
Simla Good Samaritan Center
320 Pueblo Ave Box 38
Simla, CO 80835
(719)-541-2269
Southeast Colorado Hospital & Long Term Care Ctr
373 E. 10th St.
Springfield, CO 81073
(719)-523-4501
Spalding Rehabilitation Hospital (CNA)
900 Potomac St.
Aurora, CO 80011
(303)-363-5195
Spanish Peaks Regional Health
23500 US Hwy 160
Walsenburg, CO 81089
(719)-738-4568
St. Lukes Ministry (CNA)
915 E. 9th Ave.
Denver, CO 80218
(720)-937-7023
Sterling Living Center
1420 S. 3rd Ave.
Sterling, CO 80751
(970)-522-2933
Stillwater Institute
1340 Carr St.
Denver, CO 80214
(303)-424-7677
Sunset Manor
2200 Edison St.
Brush, CO 80723
(970)-842-2825
T.H. Pickens Technical Center (CNA)
500 Airport Blvd.
Aurora, CO 80011
(303)-344-4910
T.H. Pickens Technical Center (High School)(CNA)
500 Airport Blvd.
Aurora, CO 80011
(303)-344-4910
Tilman Bishop Unified Technical Campus
2508 Blickmann
Grand Junction, CO 81505
(970)-255-2616
TLC Educational Services
1401 Potter Drive Suite 101
Colorado Springs, CO 80909
(719)-596-1840
Trinidad State Junior College - Valley Campus
1011 Main St.
Alamosa, CO 81101
(719)-589-7000
University Park Care Center
945 Desert Flower Blvd.
Pueblo, CO 81001
(719)-545-5321
Valley Inn
211 3rd Ave
Mancos, CO 81328
(970)-533-9031
Valley View Health Care Center (CNA)
2120 N 10th St.
Canon City, CO 81212
(719)-275-7569
Visiting Nurse Corporation CNA Program
390 Grant St.
Denver, CO 80203
(303)-698-6399
Walbridge Wing Convalescent Center
345 Cleveland
Meeker, CO 81641
(970)-878-5047
Western Colorado Area Health Education Center
592 32 Rd.
Clifton, CO 81520
(970)-434-5474
Yampa Valley Medical Center - Walker Care Center
1100 Central Park Dr.
Steamboat Springs, CO 80488
(970)-870-1200
Yuma Life Care Center
323 W. 9th Ave
Yuma, CO 80759
(970)-848-5804
 

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Sources of Additional Information

Information on licensing requirements for nursing and home health aides, and lists of State-approved nursing aide programs are available from State departments of public health, departments of occupational licensing, boards of nursing, and home care associations. Information about employment opportunities may be obtained from local hospitals, nursing care facilities, home health care agencies, psychiatric facilities, State boards of nursing, and local offices of the State employment service.

For information on a career as a licensed practical nurse and nursing education visit the National League for Nursing, the National Association for Practical Nurse Education and Service and the National Federation of Licensed Practical Nurses.

For information on nursing career options, financial aid, and listings of BSN, graduate, and accelerated nursing programs visit the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.

For additional information on licensed practical nurses, including credentialing visit the American Nurses Association.

For information on nurse midwives, including a list of accredited programs, visit the American College of Nurse-Midwives.

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