Are you a Certified Nursing Assistant?
CNAs at Upland Hills Health enjoy:
-
FULL BENEFITS. Need important benefits for you and your family? Our CNAs are eligible for our full benefits package while only working a half-time or greater position!
-
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULE. We offer flexibility in schedules to help our employees manage their busy lives.
-
GREAT PAY OPPORTUNITIES. CNAs start at $16.45 per hour with differential pay for P.M., night and weekend shifts. CNAs may also be eligible to receive up to three pay increases in the first year of employment.
-
FRINGE BENEFITS. We also offer our employees free wellness center memberships in our two facilities, a discount program for many health care services and an over-the-counter medication discount program.
Training and Education
Upland Hills Health offers a program that will pay for your training program (valued at close to $1,000). CNA candidates who are eligible and selected for the tuition program pay back their financial assistance by working at Upland Hills Health.
CNAs in Wisconsin are required to complete an approved educational program that will prepare them to pass a skills and education test. Programs are currently 75 hours long and include 32 clinical hours. You can find a list of programs that are approved here:
https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/caregiver/nurse-aide/natd-registry.htm
Rewarding. Fulfilling. Joyful.
Those are words our Certified Nursing Assistants (CNAs) use to describe their jobs. Did you know that CNAs work in our hospital, our clinics and in our Nursing and Rehab Center? CNAs help patients and residents with activities of daily living (bathing, grooming, eating, moving), lift and move patients and take their vital signs–but they do so much more. A CNA is involved in some very personal cares for their patients, which are extremely important to the dignity and quality of life for their patients. They often create very strong friendships and bonds with their patients. And doing those personal tasks means CNAs are often the first to notice and report signs of certain medical conditions–making their work even more vital.