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Healthcare Assistant (NHS)

Work on hospital wards and community settings alongside qualified nurses and doctors, providing personal care, monitoring observations, and supporting patient wellbeing.

Canonical page: /careers/healthcare-assistant
Physical demand

Moderate

People contact

Very high

Time to entry

1–6 months — the Care Certificate is typically completed on the job within 12 weeks of starting

What you do

Healthcare assistants (HCAs) work under registered nurses in hospitals, GP surgeries, and community health settings. Daily tasks include taking blood pressure, temperature, and pulse readings; helping patients wash, dress, and eat; supporting patients with mobility; keeping patient areas clean; and communicating changes in patient condition to qualified staff. With experience, HCAs can specialise in specific wards or take on additional clinical skills such as venepuncture.

Why this career is resilient

The NHS consistently faces workforce shortages in clinical support roles, with demand driven by an ageing population, increasing chronic disease, and expanding community care. Patient care requires physical presence and human connection that cannot be automated. The NHS is one of the UK's largest employers, providing substantial job security.


Routes in

Employer-funded training

Some employers — particularly the NHS, emergency services, and larger care providers — run their own funded training programmes. You apply for a job and train as you work.

Duration: Varies

Apprenticeship

Earn while you learn: work with an employer and study part-time, leading to a nationally recognised qualification. Typically funded by the government and your employer.

Duration: 1–4 years depending on trade

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