GMCTA · Certificate Program
Dialysis Technician
Train to assist patients with kidney failure during hemodialysis treatments. Complete this certificate in ~1–2 months with 100 total hours covering dialysis principles, machine operation, infection control, and patient-centered care.
Program Overview
This accelerated program prepares you for entry-level roles in dialysis centers and nephrology clinics. You’ll learn how hemodialysis works, set up and troubleshoot machines, adhere to strict infection-control protocols, monitor patients, and document treatments accurately.
What You’ll Learn
- Hemodialysis Principles: diffusion, ultrafiltration, fluid/electrolyte balance.
- Equipment & Water Basics: machine components, alarms, dialyzers, water treatment overview.
- Patient Care & Monitoring: pre-/intra-/post-treatment assessment, vital signs, complications awareness.
- Vascular Access (Intro): fistula/graft care, cannulation principles under supervision, catheter precautions.
- Infection Prevention & Safety: standard precautions, disinfection, waste handling, incident response.
- Documentation & Communication: treatment records, EHR basics, team handoffs, patient education.
Sample Curriculum
| Module | Topics |
|---|---|
| Kidney Function & Dialysis Basics | Renal physiology, ESRD overview, hemodialysis principles |
| Machines & Water Systems | Set-up, priming, alarms, dialyzers, water treatment overview |
| Vascular Access & Patient Safety | Fistulas/grafts, cannulation concepts, catheter precautions, safety |
| Treatment Delivery | Assessment, monitoring, complications, fluid balance |
| Infection Control & QA | Cleaning/disinfection, PPE, protocols, incident reporting |
| Documentation & Professionalism | Recording treatments, HIPAA, communication, teamwork |
FAQ
Is hands-on practice required?
Dialysis is highly hands-on. GMCTA may coordinate local labs/clinicals where available; availability varies by region and partner sites.
Does this program guarantee certification or employment?
No. Certification and employment requirements are set by external bodies and employers. Always verify current criteria for your state and intended role.
Where can I work after graduation?
Outpatient dialysis centers, hospital dialysis units, and nephrology practices—duties vary by employer and state regulations.
