JourneyCareersHealthcare Assistant
Global Career Guide (EN)From Nursing and Midwifery β†’

Healthcare Assistant

AI

A healthcare assistant supports nurses and doctors by caring for patients in hospitals, clinics or the community - helping with washing, eating, comfort and basic checks. It is hands-on, caring work for people who are kind, calm and want to help others at vulnerable moments.

The role

What a healthcare assistant actually does, day to day.

The work is helping patients wash, dress, eat and move, taking basic measurements like temperature and blood pressure, keeping patients comfortable and reassured, and supporting the nursing team. Compassion, patience and good observation matter, since you spend a lot of time with patients and often notice changes first.

Hours often include shifts, nights, weekends and bank holidays, the work is physically and emotionally demanding, and pay usually starts around the lower NHS bands. It can be tiring and at times upsetting, but it is genuinely rewarding and a strong route towards nursing.

You can often start with no formal qualifications and full training on the job, sometimes through an apprenticeship leading to a care certificate. By law you will need an enhanced DBS check, and many healthcare assistants go on to train as nurses.

A typical week

Day to day

1Help patients wash, dress and eat
2Take and record basic observations
3Help patients move safely
4Keep patients comfortable and reassured
5Support nurses and doctors with care tasks
6Keep areas clean and tidy
7Report changes in patients' condition