Health Centers are exciting and fulfilling places to work if you aspire to provide top-notch prevention and wellness services to people who need them. Health care positions include physicians, certified nurse midwives, physician's assistants, nurse practitioners, nurses, dentists, dental hygienists, dental assistants, pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, certified medical assistants, certified nursing assistants, laboratory managers, medical technologists, medical laboratory technicians and health educators and dietitians.
Because Health Centers provide support services, too, there are many positions that connect patients to other community resources, including case managers, interpreters, outstationed eligibility workers, immunization coordinators, and patient accounts clerks.
There are many positions that help keep the Health Center running effectively, including custodians, data and IT specialists, fiscal and operational professionals, medical transcriptionists, and managers in these fields.
Look through the Posted Jobs to plan or change your health care career!
Current projections estimate that Wisconsin is headed for a workforce crisis as existing workers retire. If you are interested in exploring health careers, please check out the following links:
Because Health Centers provide support services, too, there are many positions that connect patients to other community resources, including case managers, interpreters, outstationed eligibility workers, immunization coordinators, and patient accounts clerks.
There are many positions that help keep the Health Center running effectively, including custodians, data and IT specialists, fiscal and operational professionals, medical transcriptionists, and managers in these fields.
Look through the Posted Jobs to plan or change your health care career!
Current projections estimate that Wisconsin is headed for a workforce crisis as existing workers retire. If you are interested in exploring health careers, please check out the following links:
- Wisconsin AHEC: (Descriptions of over 60 health careers and video of people working in health care professions in Wisconsin.)
- Wisconsin Academy for Rural Medicine





Depression is three times more common for those who have had a heart attack than for others. Heart patients should be screened and treated for depression.
The Wisconsin Diabetes Prevention and Control Program released the 2008 revision of the Wisconsin Essential Diabetes Mellitus Care Guidelines.
Although cancer deaths have declined for both whites and African Americans in the U. S., African Americans continue to suffer the greatest burden for the most common types of cancer.


