To think that all this is accessible with only a two-year degree and no need to sink oneself into substantial student loan debt should make some question the validity of going for certain masters degrees.
Totally agree. It's one of the few great trades where you can make money and pay off debt in a short amount of time. In CA, there's a lot of opportunities to earn top dollar. I'm a PTA in the Bay Area, full time outpatient and per diem HH, where I make around just over 100k/yr
@@kcheweezy Kevin i am looking to go back to school and complete a pta degree. I'm not going to lie I'm scared as he'll with the science courses. What courses did you have to take?
@Christian Fernandez I work on average 24 patients per week at an hour per patient. So about 24 hours per week plus drive time which isn't much because I am in a localized area.
In SWFL. I’m in Home Health and make anywhere from 45-65 per visit. So far my biggest paycheck as a 1095 was $4k for 2 weeks. As far as experience I’m coming up on my first license renewal since graduation next month.
I couldn't be happier with traveling work, the pay is nearly double what I was making at the VA hospital. You need to be the adventurous type, though, and not have a lot of responsibilities to others.
Depends on location, if you choose inpatient, outpatient, home health, small clinic vs hospital. I can speak to west side of washington state outpatient. Small clinics will likely be 24-30/hr. Hospital 28-36/hr, home health 50/visit
Im a PTA in FL doing full time PRN , the rate is higher , you go to different clinics and work as much or as little as you want , Im not a big fan of home health since you have to subtract vehicle wear and tear , office supplies and time spent at home documenting which adds to the work load so an 8 hour day really turn to a 10 hour day.
@@thekylemontilla I work as an independent contractor, my contacts call me / schedule me for x amount of hours needed one week in advance, currently I am working in 2 outpatient clinics and one skilled nursing facility
I want to sign up for PTA school, but I'm hearing so much buzz about the PTA career being killed off basically. People are getting laid off, getting paid much less. I have no idea what any of the articles mean but I am hearing that it is very negative. Any pointers?
I don’t think 100% of PTA jobs will dry up in the next 5 years but the outlook may change a bit. Decreased reimbursement means companies have less money to pay staff so that could lead to cut hours or even cut positions. PTAs are not as expensive from a salary perspective, but if insurance pays less for care provided by a PTA (not the case now but may evolve to this) then companies may use PTAs less.
@@PTProgress Man... I'm 22 years old and I thought PTA would be a solid ROI, better actually than a DPT... I'm willing to do HH, travel, or basically anything. I hear some PTA's 80k+ and all that for a 8k/2year education??? But now hearing all this is making me reconsider. Would you consider it a good financial/career move? Your opinion is very valuable to me. Thanks man.
Thank you so much for the info..very informative...But so many variables for each job setting which you very briefly alluded to and I'm sure if u would have done that this video clip would have been..who knows how long?...so Great job compacting it. My advice as a Home Health PTA for 27 years... is I would rather be a PTA than a PT...and for these 2 reasons...1..I get to do the hands-on routine visits and secondly I don't want to be just doing evaluations, re evals and discharges with an overwhelming amount of paperwork(Tablet/computer) that my PT has to do...I feel bad that he misses out on that but he I'm assuming he gets paid very well (he deservedly should). So there are some of my opinionated variables
@@fegerstein since no one commented, Cross Country is a good agency. I had a friend from high school use them for a 15 week contract and she had a great experience.
Hi Tim, I've been interested in transitioning into Physical Therapy. I have a Bachelor's in business and would need to take science courses to fulfill prerequisites for DPT. Doing PTA may seem like a lot less work since I would just need to take an entrance exam and spend 2 yrs with a lot less tuition. What would be your advice for my situation?
The pay sucks. You are limited to what insurers will reimburse (not very much), companies won't allow you overtime, and there is no promotion. Basically your salary will be pretty much stagnant for your whole career. In real terms (allowing for inflation) I'm earning less as a PTA now than I was 7 years ago.
Thank you for information. I'm going to PTA school soon. I would like to know if it possible if I got my undergrad from foreign country majoring in tourism management are able to apply for DPT after I got my PTA and work a couple year?
What I need to know is if you need to go a college first and get your 2year associates degree and then you enter a pta program, can someone please answer if im right
No, a PTA is an associate level degree in and of itself. You’d graduate with something along the lines of “associate in pre physical therapy” or something like that.
You get an A.A.S. in PTA Associate of Applied Science. The most important thing is passing your national exam to get your license to practice. You can have your associates but you need your license to practice PT.
@@user-jq4tw3iq6e sorry I’m 5 months late but I really want to go into this career. i have a question though, what do I do after high school? Do I apply for an associate in biology and then do PTA program or do I apply for an associate for applied science as a freshmen? Aren’t there prerequisites and stuff?
@@bruh-bn3niEach program has its own prerequisites. Find a college with a PTA program and look at their criteria or speak to an admissions counselor. Most are just your general admission requirements and college level ACA, English, and Math. Others may require Physics in high school or college, one or the other. Some may allow you to apply to the PTA program while you’re enrolled to take prerequisites. It is kind of cookie cutter but there is flexibility. Also, at my age 46, classes expire. So, most programs want science and biology classes to be less than 10 years old and some require less than 5 years. I am retaking classes I took 14 years ago.
Do y’all think in 2021 an assistant over full doctorate would be better ? Single father here idk how I would do all the full time schooling and work 🤦🏻♂️
Depends on you as individual and support. By the way im a PTA in NY and my wife is going for OT full time. With kids PTA from a PTA 1. Quick to finish 2. Low debt (depending on school) 3. Can get pass the national average wage as a contractor(1099 not w-2 employee) + good tax preparer in the least diserable settings according to new grads (nursing home or homecare) running yourself as a business has its benefits and drawbacks just depends on your abilty to hustle. Depending on your personality I feel if your a team player hands on and really a people person PTA is right for you. Also depending on your mental fortitude do really see your self studying, getting ready for practicals for a longer time span than PTA. If your kids are young its mental drain with them and studying for so long (my opinion). Also do you have the prereqs ( 2 anat physi, 2 bios 2 chems 2 physics 1 psych 1 english 1 math gpa thats competitive ) for DPT school +bachelors degree+ volunteer and 2 or more recommendations. But...DPT 1.Way higher pay especially (1099 not w-2 but no company benefits 401k etc but do ya need that? Thats for another topic) 2. More options in settings ( option for teaching now) 3. Telehealth for home care got big after the pandemic. You can hustle and add telehealth visits for homecare for evaluations (high paying) + be in the setting that you enjoy. The telehealth decreases your need to be at every location. Imagine covering 3 PTAs and your doing a eval while on the couch...not saying to do that but yea seen it done. 4. But comes with ALOT of documentation and responsibility If your technical, see yourself as a quarterback, but still know how to get your point across without being a douche youll be a great PT . Also your gonna need ALOT of help with the kids. Like your not taking care of the kids kind of help. 3 yrs of dedicated work rotations big time papers research more practicals and presentations. So look at it from 1.whats my support 2. Who am i as an individual 3. Delayed gratification 4. Where am I at with current course work. Bacehlor degree pre reqs gpa. Can i afford free labor (ya gotta volunteer at clinics for free and have the recommended courses within a certain time frame Anatomy apparently expires...i didnt know the human body is still being updated ) 5. Where am I finiancially...your not working full time for either. Im sorry I cant see that happening unless you got passive income or 4-5 yr savìngs somewhere. I did personal training during my time as PTA student it paid for some bills but it wasnt enough. My friends Chase and Capital one and Discover fit the rest of the bills. Hope this help. I know it was alot but i wish someone told me this stuff before i got out of high school. Would have done this sooner. Anymore questions free to ask.
Physical therapist assistant career has changed for the worse. Massively over saturated market ,Dwindling pay, increased workload and only looking worse in 2022 . Reimbursement for PT vrs PTA will change in 2022. Do your homework before signing up for PTA school.
I absolutely agree! I do home health physical therapy and have been doing that for 10 years now . I’ve done outpatient and skilled nursing. I usually make about 80-90 thousand dollars a year. However with the whole PDGM changes, there was a lot of cuts, my pay was cut 10$ a visit. (I am paid per visit) . It’s not looking good for this career. I am looking for an alternative career ....... it’s getting worse . I can’t find a second job to supplement either . There is very little work now .
Pay has decreased in skilled nursing as well. Patients are getting less minutes of therapy with more grouping . The quality of therapy for patients is suffering and therapist are working much harder to make less money. It’s so sad. This use to be such a good field to work it. I know many new grads who can’t get work and therapist with experience leaving for other careers
Hi Kristi. If a program offers an OTA, it would be separate from a PTA program. You can check with the programs to make sure you didn’t overlook something on the website, but they’re not a combined program.
@@Melissa-rb6ct The job isn’t bad or super difficult, the pay is good, per dm ( when they need you they call ) offers a better flat rate of 35/hr It’s definitely worth for pay yes ! It’s definitely good for branching into home health which is where you drive to patients as a PTA and you get up to 45/hr or per patient i’m not sure you need usually 2 yrs experience before that.
@@benjistylez4923 i highly highly HIGHLY recommend “NPTE Final Frontier” it can be expensive, but this made me SO confident when testing. The test definitely is not a breeze, but it is obviously possible if you spend the time studying. I believe a 600 is passing. 800 is top score.
Like he said, it depends on where you’re at. I’m in north Louisiana making $35/hour with overtime. It’s a good job as long as you continue to look for jobs and don’t listen to the negative Nancy PTA’s. There’s a ton of them if you look in the comment section
@@lanedale5356 thanks and yeah I looked up Travel PTA, surprisingly here in Ohio where I’m at, a travel pta can up to about $70k which sucks cause I plan on leaving Ohio once I get my degree
@@musclemanmonty oh yea I make 72k before taxes and overtime with what I have now and that’s if I don’t do PRN. You can make money it just depends on the area and how willing you are. Also, if you have a proffesional manner that helps promote yourself. I’m surprised by how many people have zero proffesionalism about themselves
Im a PTA in Los Angeles doing home health, last year I made 90k. It really depends how much you are willing to hustle
Thanks for sharing Robert. You’re right - you can definitely make a good amount of money in HH as a PT or PTA!
But LA is super expensive
Thanks for sharing bro. That’s inspiring for sure. I’m in LA pursuing the same career. Hoping for even comparable success!
I'm in LA looking to do the same, that's really inspiring. How long have you been in the field and get to where you are?
@@PTProgress how can a maximize pay as a PTA?
To think that all this is accessible with only a two-year degree and no need to sink oneself into substantial student loan debt should make some question the validity of going for certain masters degrees.
I 100% agree with you, while the courses are challenging, I can make it work it’s it’s only two years and pays crazy well
Totally agree. It's one of the few great trades where you can make money and pay off debt in a short amount of time. In CA, there's a lot of opportunities to earn top dollar. I'm a PTA in the Bay Area, full time outpatient and per diem HH, where I make around just over 100k/yr
@@kcheweezy Kevin i am looking to go back to school and complete a pta degree. I'm not going to lie I'm scared as he'll with the science courses. What courses did you have to take?
I graduated with zero student loan debt. I had 100% of my schooling paid for by Pell Grants.
Finally, good info on pta salaries. Starting my school in 2 days. Something I can look forward to. Thanks!
@Diego Garcia-Gonzalez Just graduated last year and although it's intense it was well worth it. As a new grad I started at just above 60k a year
@@xOscarIGZx May I ask where you are located?
@@terryharris9265 In California. Central valley
@@xOscarIGZx How are you liking it so far? I was going to do a job shadow on monday for PTA
@@xOscarIGZx you gonna change diapers?
I am starting a PTA program in October Im so glad I chose this path and that I will have minimal student debt!!
That’s awesome! Congrats!
How’s the program so far?
Am in school 🏫 rn for PTA. 😊
@@savannahwynter9593 how are you liking it so far? 😇
Hows the program going for ya? :)
I am a home health PTA in Florida. I make $67,000 a year. I love my job. Have been a PTA for going on 6 years now.
How much hours do you work a week?
@Christian Fernandez I work on average 24 patients per week at an hour per patient. So about 24 hours per week plus drive time which isn't much because I am in a localized area.
@@noleman74 if you could, could you work with more people to get more hours? Starting PTA School soon so curious.
Did your start PTA at a later age in life.
Thinking about going into pta as a 28 year old. Anything you wish you knew before you started?
Excellent video. Very well made. Starting PTA School in January 💪🏼
CarsWithFrank congrats! Good decision!
How did it go ? How is PTA life ?
How’s PTA doing you. Starting school on April. Very excited.
@@jimmysal4992 Decided it wasn’t for me 😂 had an opportunity to do remote work and chose that instead
In SWFL. I’m in Home Health and make anywhere from 45-65 per visit. So far my biggest paycheck as a 1095 was $4k for 2 weeks.
As far as experience I’m coming up on my first license renewal since graduation next month.
Was this your typical Mon-Friday 40 hour settings?
If you're interested in more info about becoming a PTA, check out Antonio's channel: ua-cam.com/channels/8U5xqEWNTDG85e8-VDpKzA.htmlfeatured
great channel , did an interview about the PTA profession here
ua-cam.com/video/2i6uNGv1bSI/v-deo.html
😂 hahaha salary weather reporter! Good stuff, man! You've got the jokes. That's awesome character. Keep up the awesome work, bro.
I’m making $45 a visit doing home health. 30 visits a week. 6 a day
Rip
I couldn't be happier with traveling work, the pay is nearly double what I was making at the VA hospital. You need to be the adventurous type, though, and not have a lot of responsibilities to others.
Appreciate the video, just recently switched to pta training and its great info.
Depends on location, if you choose inpatient, outpatient, home health, small clinic vs hospital. I can speak to west side of washington state outpatient. Small clinics will likely be 24-30/hr. Hospital 28-36/hr, home health 50/visit
Don't know why this popped up on my feed but the "in your neck of the woods" got you a like and follow.
Im a PTA in FL doing full time PRN , the rate is higher , you go to different clinics and work as much or as little as you want , Im not a big fan of home health since you have to subtract vehicle wear and tear , office supplies and time spent at home documenting which adds to the work load so an 8 hour day really turn to a 10 hour day.
Can you elaborate please? I've never heard of working full time PRN
Do you mean you're on call?
@@thekylemontilla I work as an independent contractor, my contacts call me / schedule me for x amount of hours needed one week in advance, currently I am working in 2 outpatient clinics and one skilled nursing facility
@@Loso561 I see, how does one go and become an independent contractor?
@@thekylemontilla some job openings offer PRN work or you can offer your therapy services at different places
If you don’t mine how is the pay? I’m going to school for PTA
Can you make a video about the pros and cons of going either the PTA route or PT route?
Thats what I'd like to know
Less school and 7k in debt vs more school and 200k in debt.
@@blackout4338 Lol true
Program in Florida is 11k
I’m 3 weeks in pta program and if you pass kinesiology the first semester… smooth ride to become pta
Just started PTA school this week!
How do you like it so far? Joining next year hopefully
Regulators Of Christ R.O.C Love it so far. Very busy and lots of material, but also very fun. Hope everything goes well for you! 😊
What school are you going to?
@@stephanieh8692 what school are you attending. I want to do it too but I'm confused on how to start. I'm in community college right now
Thank you much for the info!
Best thing to do is look up jobs that show their pay scale on indeed. That’s when you know real pay.
The best way to find out what jobs are going for in your area are to go to places like indeed and look at what is actually available
I want to sign up for PTA school, but I'm hearing so much buzz about the PTA career being killed off basically. People are getting laid off, getting paid much less. I have no idea what any of the articles mean but I am hearing that it is very negative. Any pointers?
I don’t think 100% of PTA jobs will dry up in the next 5 years but the outlook may change a bit. Decreased reimbursement means companies have less money to pay staff so that could lead to cut hours or even cut positions. PTAs are not as expensive from a salary perspective, but if insurance pays less for care provided by a PTA (not the case now but may evolve to this) then companies may use PTAs less.
@@PTProgress Man... I'm 22 years old and I thought PTA would be a solid ROI, better actually than a DPT... I'm willing to do HH, travel, or basically anything. I hear some PTA's 80k+ and all that for a 8k/2year education??? But now hearing all this is making me reconsider. Would you consider it a good financial/career move? Your opinion is very valuable to me. Thanks man.
Thank you so much for the info..very informative...But so many variables for each job setting which you very briefly alluded to and I'm sure if u would have done that this video clip would have been..who knows how long?...so Great job compacting it. My advice as a Home Health PTA for 27 years... is I would rather be a PTA than a PT...and for these 2 reasons...1..I get to do the hands-on routine visits and secondly I don't want to be just doing evaluations, re evals and discharges with an overwhelming amount of paperwork(Tablet/computer) that my PT has to do...I feel bad that he misses out on that but he I'm assuming he gets paid very well (he deservedly should). So there are some of my opinionated variables
They are actually planning to upgrade the PTA program to a Masters degree level in the next few years so I don't think it's going anywhere.
That weather forecast got you a sub bro! 😂
Just pass my board and ready to start traveling
Nice! Did you land a travel job yet?
I’m working locally right now ,I’m going to start traveling next month.
Son pierrelouis how is the pay?
@@nolimitbenny7821 what company, I am a PTA and would like to start traveling
@@fegerstein since no one commented, Cross Country is a good agency. I had a friend from high school use them for a 15 week contract and she had a great experience.
Hi Tim, I've been interested in transitioning into Physical Therapy. I have a Bachelor's in business and would need to take science courses to fulfill prerequisites for DPT. Doing PTA may seem like a lot less work since I would just need to take an entrance exam and spend 2 yrs with a lot less tuition. What would be your advice for my situation?
Pta
Please note that the info from the APTA is very outdated at this point.
PTA in Cali getting laid off left and right. Hours getting cut and pay dropping. PDPM is killing the profession.
Pdpm?
@@patches1396 Patient-Driven Payment Model
@@KYALEONE What does that mean?
Is this still a prominent issue?
Hey there have you heard about the budget cuts that are being made by the CMS?
Gods Child - PDGM
That's what I want to know!!!
The pay sucks. You are limited to what insurers will reimburse (not very much), companies won't allow you overtime, and there is no promotion. Basically your salary will be pretty much stagnant for your whole career. In real terms (allowing for inflation) I'm earning less as a PTA now than I was 7 years ago.
Fuck that then😭
Thank you for information. I'm going to PTA school soon. I would like to know if it possible if I got my undergrad from foreign country majoring in tourism management are able to apply for DPT after I got my PTA and work a couple year?
Hello!What do I need to do to open my own physiotherapy clinic/studio in America?And how profitable can it be?
This practice should get way more then this. Do you have to be in school for more years compared to nurses?
Most courses are about 2 years or 18 months
would you open your own clinic in the future?
What I need to know is if you need to go a college first and get your 2year associates degree and then you enter a pta program, can someone please answer if im right
No, a PTA is an associate level degree in and of itself. You’d graduate with something along the lines of “associate in pre physical therapy” or something like that.
@@joelmier2005 Ok Sir
You get an A.A.S. in PTA
Associate of Applied Science. The most important thing is passing your national exam to get your license to practice. You can have your associates but you need your license to practice PT.
@@user-jq4tw3iq6e sorry I’m 5 months late but I really want to go into this career. i have a question though, what do I do after high school? Do I apply for an associate in biology and then do PTA program or do I apply for an associate for applied science as a freshmen? Aren’t there prerequisites and stuff?
@@bruh-bn3niEach program has its own prerequisites. Find a college with a PTA program and look at their criteria or speak to an admissions counselor. Most are just your general admission requirements and college level ACA, English, and Math. Others may require Physics in high school or college, one or the other. Some may allow you to apply to the PTA program while you’re enrolled to take prerequisites. It is kind of cookie cutter but there is flexibility. Also, at my age 46, classes expire. So, most programs want science and biology classes to be less than 10 years old and some require less than 5 years. I am retaking classes I took 14 years ago.
Do y’all think in 2021 an assistant over full doctorate would be better ? Single father here idk how I would do all the full time schooling and work 🤦🏻♂️
Depends on you as individual and support. By the way im a PTA in NY and my wife is going for OT full time. With kids
PTA from a PTA
1. Quick to finish
2. Low debt (depending on school)
3. Can get pass the national average wage as a contractor(1099 not w-2 employee) + good tax preparer in the least diserable settings according to new grads (nursing home or homecare) running yourself as a business has its benefits and drawbacks just depends on your abilty to hustle.
Depending on your personality I feel if your a team player hands on and really a people person PTA is right for you. Also depending on your mental fortitude do really see your self studying, getting ready for practicals for a longer time span than PTA. If your kids are young its mental drain with them and studying for so long (my opinion).
Also do you have the prereqs ( 2 anat physi, 2 bios 2 chems 2 physics 1 psych 1 english 1 math gpa thats competitive ) for DPT school +bachelors degree+ volunteer and 2 or more recommendations.
But...DPT
1.Way higher pay especially (1099 not w-2 but no company benefits 401k etc but do ya need that? Thats for another topic)
2. More options in settings ( option for teaching now)
3. Telehealth for home care got big after the pandemic. You can hustle and add telehealth visits for homecare for evaluations (high paying) + be in the setting that you enjoy. The telehealth decreases your need to be at every location. Imagine covering 3 PTAs and your doing a eval while on the couch...not saying to do that but yea seen it done.
4. But comes with ALOT of documentation and responsibility
If your technical, see yourself as a quarterback, but still know how to get your point across without being a douche youll be a great PT . Also your gonna need ALOT of help with the kids. Like your not taking care of the kids kind of help. 3 yrs of dedicated work rotations big time papers research more practicals and presentations.
So look at it from
1.whats my support
2. Who am i as an individual
3. Delayed gratification
4. Where am I at with current course work. Bacehlor degree pre reqs gpa. Can i afford free labor (ya gotta volunteer at clinics for free and have the recommended courses within a certain time frame Anatomy apparently expires...i didnt know the human body is still being updated )
5. Where am I finiancially...your not working full time for either. Im sorry I cant see that happening unless you got passive income or 4-5 yr savìngs somewhere. I did personal training during my time as PTA student it paid for some bills but it wasnt enough. My friends Chase and Capital one and Discover fit the rest of the bills.
Hope this help. I know it was alot but i wish someone told me this stuff before i got out of high school. Would have done this sooner. Anymore questions free to ask.
yespta is good
Is a pta still good choice with the reimbursement cuts
No I do not feel it is.
@@danettekerr3466 ya I all ready moved on to something else
Can you explain to me this please, is 4 years college degree means 2 years in college and then 2 years in university or 4 other years in university??
??
Physical therapist assistant career has changed for the worse. Massively over saturated market ,Dwindling pay, increased workload and only looking worse in 2022 . Reimbursement for PT vrs PTA will change in 2022. Do your homework before signing up for PTA school.
Can you elaborate more as I was actually thinking about trying to go to pt school soon
Taaaaaylor PT or PTA?
jeremy schmitt PTA until I’m ready to become a PT
I absolutely agree! I do home health physical therapy and have been doing that for 10 years now . I’ve done outpatient and skilled nursing. I usually make about 80-90 thousand dollars a year. However with the whole PDGM changes, there was a lot of cuts, my pay was cut 10$ a visit. (I am paid per visit) . It’s not looking good for this career. I am looking for an alternative career ....... it’s getting worse . I can’t find a second job to supplement either . There is very little work now .
Pay has decreased in skilled nursing as well. Patients are getting less minutes of therapy with more grouping . The quality of therapy for patients is suffering and therapist are working much harder to make less money. It’s so sad. This use to be such a good field to work it. I know many new grads who can’t get work and therapist with experience leaving for other careers
Can someone please tell me if colleges just catogorize the OTA’s and the PTA’s learning degree under PTA only? It never says occupational therapy :(
Hi Kristi. If a program offers an OTA, it would be separate from a PTA program. You can check with the programs to make sure you didn’t overlook something on the website, but they’re not a combined program.
PTProgress thank you, I really needed to know this! I live in Central Florida, and all the colleges around me only offer PTA.....
I like both fields but I have to ensure good pay, do you know which profession gets paid better? And how their schedules may differ?
@@kristilynn5655 do it for your passion for whatever one you pick. I suggest shadowing if you haven't already.
I live in Florida and in pta school ❤️
How’s it going now?
@@Melissa-rb6ct I graduated, my opinion is school is way harder then the PTA national examination
@@fabriziom0010 dang, is the job hard? The pay good? Is it worth it pretty much?
@@Melissa-rb6ct The job isn’t bad or super difficult, the pay is good, per dm ( when they need you they call ) offers a better flat rate of 35/hr
It’s definitely worth for pay yes !
It’s definitely good for branching into home health which is where you drive to patients as a PTA and you get up to 45/hr or per patient i’m not sure you need usually 2 yrs experience before that.
I like windy money
What about working in Canada Tim, do you know if it's better (because that's what I read)..
Not sure what it’s like to work in Canada
Prerequisites?
I saw a listing on indeed for 11$ an hour haha
Must have been for an aide not an assistant. If it was for a PT assistant thats crazy
Im in florida lucky me haha
Do you need to take any math or physics in the program
Yes math no physics
Is pt assistant the same and pt technician ?
No. PTA requires schooling and passing a licensure exam etc...
@@braydencounts165 is that exam hard? What score do you need?
@@benjistylez4923 i highly highly HIGHLY recommend “NPTE Final Frontier” it can be expensive, but this made me SO confident when testing. The test definitely is not a breeze, but it is obviously possible if you spend the time studying. I believe a 600 is passing. 800 is top score.
@@braydencounts165 and if you fail what happen?
@@braydencounts165 do you also change diapers from old ppl?
Hospital adminsration ?
Hay quá
Can indians do !
Is that 50-60k before or after taxes 🤔
Those are before tax figures
Like he said, it depends on where you’re at. I’m in north Louisiana making $35/hour with overtime. It’s a good job as long as you continue to look for jobs and don’t listen to the negative Nancy PTA’s. There’s a ton of them if you look in the comment section
@@lanedale5356 thanks and yeah I looked up Travel PTA, surprisingly here in Ohio where I’m at, a travel pta can up to about $70k which sucks cause I plan on leaving Ohio once I get my degree
@@musclemanmonty oh yea I make 72k before taxes and overtime with what I have now and that’s if I don’t do PRN. You can make money it just depends on the area and how willing you are. Also, if you have a proffesional manner that helps promote yourself. I’m surprised by how many people have zero proffesionalism about themselves
@@lanedale5356 thank you 🙏🏾 also what’s prn?
Hay quá
Hay quá