| Literature DB >> 35578176 |
Stacie Vilendrer1, Alexis Amano2, Cati Brown Johnson2, Timothy Morrison3, Steve Asch2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Growing demand for medical assistants (MAs) in team-based primary care has led health systems to explore career ladders based on expanded MA responsibilities as a solution to improve MA recruitment and retention. However, the practical implementation of career ladders remains a challenge for many health systems. In this study, we aim to understand MA career aspirations and their alignment with available advancement opportunities.Entities:
Keywords: Career ladders; Health care workforce; Medical assistants; Primary care; Team-based care
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35578176 PMCID: PMC9109348 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-022-01712-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Prim Care ISSN: 2731-4553
Fig. 1Lightning report on focus group findings
Medical assistant desired career trajectories and recommended path for advancement by cluster
| Cluster | Definition | Example of cluster | Direct and implied recommended paths for advancement |
|---|---|---|---|
| “Springboard” medical assistants | These individuals pursue an MA role as one step along a path to obtain a higher level license in healthcare | “I’m going to be going into nursing school, so I’m using medical assisting as a stepping stone, to get where I want to be, and also have a good resume. So, I really like it. Facilitator: Because it’s hard to get into nursing school? MA: Right. And also saving up money. (MA 4, FG 10) “I know some people want to be nurses. They’re not quite sure that they want to be an RN and be that committed. So, they try to be a medical assistant, and if that goes well, they go to the next step.”(MA 7, FG 6) “I actually want to become a primary school teacher, so this is just to save money for school. And then I’m going to go back to school… So I wanted to become an RN, but I kind of got sick of healthcare and I want to do something different.” (MA 5, FG 10) | “MA9: There’s an agreement, where you have to stay with [health system], for a certain amount after, or you would have to pay them back…I would say three years… It’s like 1%. Interviewer: Okay, so it’s 1% of tuition cost, but in order to not pay that back, you have to work for them for three years? MA9: Right.” (MA9, FG10) “…like even any leadership position or training position you have to have a BA or a BS or something like that to move up for those, so that’s where the struggle is for that, especially with the hours that we work it’s hard to do schooling to completely finish a program without leaving your job position.” (MA 2, FG 1) |
| “Career” medical assistants | These individuals are not interested in receiving additional training to move out of the MA role; some are interested in growing within their careers as MAs. | “MA2: I know I don’t want to be a nurse, so I’m not going to go to school for that. Would I love to make more money? Sure. Do I love my schedule here? Yes. I work four 10s, Fridays off, don’t work holidays, don’t work weekends. I don’t want to go to graveyard. I don’t want to go to weekends. I don’t want to be on call...I mean I know it’s not the best thing to do but right now I’m happy and comfortable. My bills are paid…. MA4: If you love the provider you work with, you have the perfect schedule and you’re not totally getting crappy pay then that’s a comfortable spot to be in.” (MA2, MA4, FG7) “I actually literally got into a discussion with an RN who told me that us MAs are nurse wannabes that couldn’t cut it. I was like ‘How insulting’. First off, we do this for a reason…we love the clinic setting. I said ‘you couldn’t step into my clinic and do what I did no more than I could step in and run your machines…You just couldn’t, I don’t care what your degrees.’ It’s different but the pay differences is ridiculous but what we do is equally as important as what they do. We’re not nurse wannabes. I wouldn’t be a nurse over an MA.” (MA3, FG9) | “I don’t know it was this year or last year, but I had heard that there was some clinic, somewhere, that [INSTITUTION] had actually hired a medical assistant as an assistant manager, and I think for a little while that was kind of motivating. Because you’re like, ‘Oh, we can actually do that?’… there’s a lot of people that are medical assistants that are actually striving to be management.” (MA3, FG4) “MA3: At my other clinic [prior to switching to current clinic] I very well would have been the managing MA that writes the schedule, covers the docs. Interviewer: So that would have been motivating for you? MA3: Oh, absolutely…Because with that came a pay raises as well.” (MA3, FG9) |
Direct and implied MA recommendations for improving career ladders
| Recommendation | Example Quotation |
|---|---|
| Clear and transparent expectations for advancement, regularly communicated | “[We need] a better understanding of the tiers of how you become an MA 2? How you become MA 3? What are they basing that on? What skill set? You know, because a lot of us have been doing this for like 10 years plus. So what experience skills is necessary for…And it would have to be consistent from every [health system] clinic…cause it’s not [currently].” (MA 4, FG 3) |
| Consistent recognition of training, experience and work responsibilities, despite variation across backgrounds and clinic location | “So, I don’t think it’s fair to be categorized under the whole [health system] because we really do more than other MAs do at other locations. I think that for our location, we should be categorized separately because we do a lot more than they do at regular [clinics].” (MA9, FG6) |
| Ability to advance without waiting for a role opening | “MA 1: Yeah, I would have to leave this clinic in order to just to become an M.A. 2, one level up… MA2: Yeah, cause I started at [clinic] as an M.A. 2, and I came here cause it was like less of a commute for me, and the only available spot they had was an M.A. 1, and now I’m doing so much more than I was doing over there but it’s still M.A. 1. And I have the experience, well, we all have the experience of like an M.A. 3.” (MA1, MA2, FG 3) |
| Ability to advance while specializing in certain tasks | “Yeah, I just know of other medical companies, very close to us, that have MAs who function as MAs, and room the patients and take care of the patients, and they have other people in their buildings who do the referrals, and do the faxes, and do the paperwork. That’s what I came from. ... So it’s separate, and it’s not merged into one position. So having it separate, and not putting all the pressure and responsibility on one person, seems to be a better...Instead of so much responsibility on one person, and then we all have burnout and don’t want to come to our job… “(MA7, FG10) |
| Individual career counseling | “MA1: I think they should individually sit down with you and talk to you where each of you are at, individually, that way we know where to grow, and where to become a better MA. We have our ‘yearlys’ [annual review], but it has nothing to do with this [career ladder]. MA4: I don’t have a yearly. (MA1, MA4, FG5) |
| Direct payment for educational opportunities out of educational funds | “I want to do my certificate, but the money is a barrier. We have the $2000 [in education credit] that we all have, but instead of [the health system] paying the money towards that, they want us to pay it directly and then they’ll refund it. I think if they can pay them directly, it will make it a little bit easier for us to do the certification for MA. Or go back to school, get the online courses, go in to become and RN or whatever someone would like to be.” (MA1, FG5) |
| Demonstration of appreciation from health system and local physicians | “But there’s no promotion, even if you do a perfect job, you don’t have a promotion with that. Okay. No we don’t have anything, we don’t have an employee of the month, or anything like that as this office.” (MA 1, FG 2) “You know, it’s really not just about the money, but we do so much more than a lot of our other clinics…I feel that it would be awesome to have that [increased compensation] though, and title change just to show the appreciation for the medical assistants and for how much they do.” (MA 4, FG 3) |