GMCTA · Certificate Program
Medical Assistant
Train for front- and back-office responsibilities in ambulatory care. Complete this certificate in 1–2 months with 100 total hours covering clinical skills, patient communication, and medical office procedures.
Program Overview
This accelerated program prepares you for entry-level roles assisting physicians and nurses in outpatient settings. You’ll practice vital signs, exam room preparation, specimen collection support, EHR documentation basics, and patient-facing communication and professionalism.
What You’ll Learn
- Clinical Foundations: vital signs, patient intake, exam room setup, infection control.
- Diagnostics Support: basic specimen collection/processing, intro to point-of-care tests.
- Administrative Skills: scheduling, records, billing basics, professional communication.
- EHR & Documentation: charting fundamentals, privacy practices, HIPAA awareness.
- Patient Experience: empathy, cultural sensitivity, de-escalation, service mindset.
- Career Readiness: resumes, interviews, workplace expectations.
Sample Curriculum
| Module | Topics |
|---|---|
| Patient Intake & Vitals | History, measurements, documentation, infection control |
| Exam Room & Procedures | Room prep, assisting with exams, equipment basics |
| Specimens & Testing | Collection support, labeling, POC testing fundamentals |
| Medical Office Admin | Scheduling, records, billing basics, customer service |
| EHR & Compliance | Charting, privacy, HIPAA, professionalism |
| Career & Professional Skills | Resume, interview prep, workplace conduct |
FAQ
Is there an externship?
Skills practice is highly recommended. GMCTA may coordinate local labs/clinicals where available; availability varies by region and partner sites.
Does this guarantee certification or employment?
No school can guarantee licensure, certification, or employment. We provide training and preparation; outcomes depend on individual performance and external requirements.
Where can I work after graduation?
Outpatient clinics, physician offices, urgent care, and community health centers—duties vary by employer.
