If you're looking to kickstart your career in a caring profession, there are many roles to consider.
Working as a care professional can be extremely rewarding. From self-employed carers to those making a difference in domiciliary care businesses, care homes, mental health, and foster care. We look at options for anyone considering pursuing a career as a carer.
Changing jobs or finding work for the first time can be daunting. However, care work is a worthy career. Care workers help clients manage their daily activities and live as independently as possible. While challenging, the job is popular because you are doing something worthwhile and making a real difference.
There are many types of care businesses to work for in the UK and a wide range of career paths available.
Here are some roles for those considering a move into caring:
Depending on the person's needs, there are different types of domiciliary care, from respite to live-in care. Also known as home care, this type sees staff help older people or those with disabilities or illnesses in their homes.1
Care workers will be matched to people based on their skills and location and will help with their day-to-day living. Daily care visits, lasting up to an hour, could include tasks such as helping with housework, shopping, preparing food and going out on day trips.
Types include:
Staff at care homes assist residents such as the elderly who live there short-term for respite or permanently. Some employ qualified nursing staff 24 hours a day, seven days a week, while others provide personal care with district nurses.3
Caring roles are also available at specialist homes, such as for people with dementia needing dedicated support.4
Others specialise in providing palliative care for those with a terminal illness.
You may consider becoming a self-employed career to fit your working hours around you. Other advantages include setting your own rates and choosing your own clients. You must want to help people, be sensitive, understanding and patient, and work well under pressure.5
Care assistants, support workers and nursing home assistants are all jobs to consider. However, there are also many other roles:
Hospices offer various services such as rehabilitation, complementary therapies and psychological and social support.6
Caring hospice staff comfort terminally ill patients and their families when they need it the most. Trained staff can provide care and bereavement support as well as offer pain and symptom control.6
Working in mental health care can make a massive difference to vulnerable people's lives.7
Roles include psychologists, psychiatrists, mental health nurses, social workers and pharmacists. Skilled staff may work on long-stay rehabilitation wards or secure wards, while others offer counselling or community support.
There are also careers in many therapies, such as occupational therapy and drama, music or art therapies.
Foster carers look after young people who cannot live with their birth families. You do not need any specific qualifications, but you could take a college course.8
You can enter a caring role through a college course, apprenticeship or by volunteering.
There are also opportunities to apply directly, or you may have experience of looking after a friend or relative. Care assistants, support workers and nursing home assistants are all jobs to consider. Caring hospice staff comfort terminally ill patients and their families when they need it the most.
Other career paths include roles at foster care agencies and mental health service providers, working on long-term rehabilitation or secure wards.
The National Careers Service has more information.5
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