Health Unit Coordinator (HUD)

  • Health Unit Coordinator (HUD)

Health unit coordinators, or unit secretaries, assist in maintaining patient and unit records, ordering supplies, transcribing orders, coordinating patient activities for the unit and serving as liaisons between staff, patients and visitors.

Work Activities/Work Locations

Health unit coordinators work in health care settings such as hospitals units, clinics, public health care agencies, or nursing homes. They serve as the communications link among departments, physicians, nursing staff and patients and visitors. They may work with computers. They may work full or part-time, day, evening or night shifts.

Getting Started

High school students should study health, computer courses, biology and chemistry. Formal training is required, usually through a six-month to one-year program at a community or vocational-technical college. 

American Health Information Management Association
233 N. Michigan Ave., 21st Floor
Chicago, IL, 60601-5809
312/233-1100 or 800/335-5535
www.ahima.org

National Association of Health Unit Coordinators
1947 Madron Road
Rockford, IL, 61107-1716
815-633-4351 or 888-22-NAHUC (62482)
www.nahuc.org

Career Outlook

Number Employed in 2014 (Wisconsin): 9,390
Number Employed in 2014 (U.S.): 527,600
Expected Employment in 2024 (U.S.): 635,800
Percent Employment Growth (2014-2024): 21%
Expected Annual Openings: 16,380
Median Salary in 2014 (Wisconsin): $32,931

Salary information is located at Career One Stop

Wisconsin AHEC Health Careers Information Center provides the most current salary information available from CareerOneStop. CareerOneStop will have a lapse between when the information is gathered and when it is released.