Surgical Technologists
- Employment is expected
to grow much faster than the average for all occupations through the
year 2014.
- Job opportunities are
expected to be good.
- Training programs last 9
to 24 months and lead to a certificate, diploma, or associate degree.
- Hospitals
will continue to be the primary employer, although much faster
employment growth is expected in offices of physicians and in
outpatient care centers, including ambulatory surgical centers.
During surgery,
technologists pass instruments and other sterile
supplies to surgeons and surgeon assistants. They may hold retractors,
cut sutures, and help count sponges, needles, supplies, and
instruments. Surgical technologists help prepare, care for, and dispose
of specimens taken for laboratory analysis and help apply dressings.
Some operate sterilizers, lights, or suction machines, and help operate
diagnostic equipment.
After an operation,
surgical technologists may help transfer
patients to the recovery room and clean and restock the operating room.
Surgical technologists
work in clean, well-lighted, cool
environments. They must stand for long periods and remain alert during
operations. At times they may be exposed to communicable diseases and
unpleasant sights, odors, and materials.
Most surgical
technologists work a regular 40-hour week, although
they may be on call or work nights, weekends, and holidays on a
rotating basis.
Surgical
technologists
receive their training in formal programs
offered by community and junior colleges, vocational schools,
universities, hospitals, and the military. In 2005, the Commission on
Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP) recognized
more than 400 accredited programs. Programs last from 9 to 24 months
and lead to a certificate, diploma, or associate degree. High school
graduation normally is required for admission. Recommended high school
courses include health, biology, chemistry, and mathematics.
Programs provide
classroom education and supervised clinical
experience. Students take courses in anatomy, physiology, microbiology,
pharmacology, professional ethics, and medical terminology. Other
studies cover the care and safety of patients during surgery, sterile
techniques, and surgical procedures. Students also learn to sterilize
instruments; prevent and control infection; and handle special drugs,
solutions, supplies, and equipment.
Most employers prefer to
hire certified technologists. Technologists
may obtain voluntary professional certification from the Liaison
Council on Certification for the Surgical Technologist by graduating
from a CAAHEP-accredited program and passing a national certification
examination. They may then use the Certified Surgical Technologist
(CST) designation. Continuing education or reexamination is required to
maintain certification, which must be renewed every 4 years.
Certification also may
be obtained from the National Center for
Competency Testing. To qualify to take the exam, candidates follow one
of three paths: complete an accredited training program; undergo a
2-year hospital on-the-job training program; or acquire seven years of
experience working in the field. After passing the exam, individuals
may use the designation Tech in Surgery-Certified, TS-C (NCCT). This
certification may be renewed every 5 years through either continuing
education or reexamination.
Surgical technologists
need manual dexterity to handle instruments
quickly. They also must be conscientious, orderly, and emotionally
stable to handle the demands of the operating room environment.
Technologists must respond quickly and must be familiar with operating
procedures in order to have instruments ready for surgeons without
having to be told. They are expected to keep abreast of new
developments in the field.
Technologists advance by
specializing in a particular area of
surgery, such as neurosurgery or open heart surgery. They also may work
as circulating technologists. A circulating technologist is the
“unsterile” member of the surgical team who
prepares patients; helps
with anesthesia; obtains and opens packages for the
“sterile” persons
to remove the sterile contents during the procedure; interviews the
patient before surgery; keeps a written account of the surgical
procedure; and answers the surgeon’s questions about the
patient during
the surgery. With additional training, some technologists advance to
first assistants, who help with retracting, sponging, suturing,
cauterizing bleeders, and closing and treating wounds. Some surgical
technologists manage central supply departments in hospitals, or take
positions with insurance companies, sterile supply services, and
operating equipment firms.
Surgical technologists
held about 84,000 jobs in 2004. About 7 out
of 10 jobs for surgical technologists were in hospitals, mainly in
operating and delivery rooms. Other jobs were in offices of physicians
or dentists who perform outpatient surgery and in outpatient care
centers, including ambulatory surgical centers. A few, known as private
scrubs, are employed directly by surgeons who have special surgical
teams, like those for liver transplants.
Employment of surgical
technologists is expected to grow much faster than average
for all occupations through the year 2014 as the volume of surgery
increases. Job opportunities are expected to be good. The number of
surgical procedures is expected to rise as the population grows and
ages. The number of older people, including the baby boom generation,
who generally require more surgical procedures, will account for a
larger portion of the general population. Technological advances, such
as fiber optics and laser technology, will permit an increasing number
of new surgical procedures to be performed and also will allow surgical
technologists to assist with a greater number of procedures.
Hospitals will continue
to be the primary employer of surgical
technologists, although much faster employment growth is expected in
offices of physicians and in outpatient care centers, including
ambulatory surgical centers.
Median annual earnings
of surgical technologists were $34,010 in May
2004. The middle 50 percent earned between $28,560 and $40,750. The
lowest 10 percent earned less than $23,940, and the highest 10 percent
earned more than $45,990. Median hourly earnings in the industries
employing the largest numbers of surgical technologists in May 2004
were:
| Offices of dentists |
$37,510 |
| Offices of physicians |
36,570 |
| General medical and
surgical
hospitals |
33,130 |
|