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That MRI technician handling your ultrasound image or the medical assistant copying your insurance card holds a job in hot demand.

And in the Sacramento area, there aren’t enough well-trained graduates to fill the vacancies. Aiming to heal a “quality-skills gap,” a new campus for training medical assistants, ultrasound, X-ray, and MRI technologists debuted this week in Sacramento County. When it opens for classes in July, Gurnick Academy, part of a San Mateo-based small chain, will offer certificates and two-year associate degrees.

“We’re just on the cusp of being one of the top healthcare markets in the country, but there’s a skills gap. We have 2,000 jobs (at hospitals) that are not filled because they don’t have the trained talent,” said Barry Broome, president, and CEO of the Greater Sacramento Economic Council, standing in the school’s newly leased 16,480-square-foot space off Highway 50 and Watt Avenue.

Broome said Gurnick would help meet the need for faster, state-of-the-art training to provide skilled job applicants for Sacramento hospitals, such as Dignity, Sutter, and UC Davis.

“We can’t find enough well-trained people,” said Anette Smith-Dohring, workforce development manager for Sutter Health in Sacramento. “With the demise of other for-profit schools, there’s a quality-skills gap,” she said, making it difficult for hospital employers to find well-trained diagnostic imaging graduates in the greater Sacramento region. Even with other schools providing training, she said, a new wave of older employee retirements – a so-called “silver tsunami” – means insufficient supply to meet the hiring demand.

According to Broome, this week’s announcement capped a two-year process to lure Gurnick to Sacramento. Part of that effort was ensuring partnerships with Samsung’s Boston-based health division for sophisticated medical teaching tools and a pipeline to Sutter, Dignity, and UC Davis hospitals for externship opportunities and potential job placements.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Standards, the demand for medical assistants and diagnostic imaging technologists remains strong. Employment for radiological and MRI technologists is expected to grow 9 percent through 2024, with annual median wages between $57,450 and $68,420. Medical assistants’ job outlook is even more robust, with employment expected to grow 23 percent through 2024. Last year, the median annual wage for medical assistants was $31,540.

The median annual wages are even higher in California: $34,530 yearly for medical assistants, $76,100 for radiological technologists, and $88,961 for MRI technologists.

The degrees are not cheap. According to campus officials, a two-year associate degree for ultrasound, MRI, or radiology technologist training costs $38,000 to $45,000. The eight-month medical assistant certificate is about $12,000-$13,000.

There’s also plenty of competition. Other private schools, like Unitek College and MTI College, offer medical assistant training. Sacramento-area community colleges, including Cosumnes River College, also have certificate programs for ultrasound technologists and medical assistants.

Some for-profit schools have been dinged or shut down for charging sky-high tuition and saddling students with thousands of dollars in debt with few job prospects recently. Broom said that wouldn’t be the case with Gurnick’s program due to its pipeline to waiting jobs in the Sacramento region.

He considers Gurnick’s training “complementary” to community college courses but with faster, more effective training and state-of-the-art teaching tools from Samsung.

Philip Sullivan, president, and CEO of NeuroLogica, Samsung’s healthcare division, flew in from Boston to announce its collaboration with Gurnick. He said Samsung’s diagnostic teaching tools, such as neonatal imaging used to view a baby’s heart while still in the womb, are the next generation of new imaging systems faster, easier to use, and cut the technician’s time from 15 minutes to one (1) minute.

“It’s about how do we make the process simpler so people can spend more time interacting with patients, rather than with (medical) equipment,” Sullivan said.

Sullivan said that dignity, Sutter, and UC Davis hospitals already use Samsung imaging equipment, so students will be trained on equipment similar to what they’d find in the workplace.

Gurnick is hiring faculty and accepting student applications for its first Sacramento school year, starting early July. It hopes to have up to 30 X-ray technologists, 20 ultrasound or MRI technologists, and 20 medical assistants enrolled when classes begin. By next year, it expects to have 160 students taking classes.

They will be full-time students, working either in on-campus labs or externships with local hospitals such as Sutter, Dignity, UC Davis Medical Center, and other outpatient clinics.

“The support we’ve had to ensure we have places for our students to go has been overwhelming,” said Burke Malin, Gurnick’s chief operations officer.

For the two-year diagnostic imaging program, students must complete between 800 and 1,000 hours of clinical training at local hospitals or other medical facilities. “They’ll have complete lab experience, so when they go into a facility, they’re familiar with the equipment and protocols,” Malin said.

The new medical program has a 10-year lease in an office park at 8810 Cal Center Drive. Gurnick Academy, started in San Mateo in 2004, has five Northern California campuses, including Concord, Modesto, and Fresno. Its other schools offer nursing programs and medical assisting degrees.

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See the original story here:  New campus targets hot healthcare jobs: Medical assistants, MRI, ultrasound imaging.

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