I'm a residential counselor at a group home and my supervisor just told me I need to get my AMAP certification within 60 days. I've looked at a few different training schedules and they seem to vary wildly - some are listing the written component as a 2-hour exam and others are describing it as more of an open-book assessment. Can anyone clarify what format to expect?
I have zero pharmacy background so I'm starting basically from scratch on medication terminology and the five rights framework. The practical skills portion doesn't worry me as much since I'm already comfortable with documentation and resident interaction. It's the pharmacology concepts and error-reporting protocols that I think will trip me up if I't careless about studying them.
My agency is sending me to a 16-hour classroom training next month, but I want to do some self-study beforehand so I'm not completely lost on day one. How much pre-reading actually makes a difference, or is the classroom training comprehensive enough that pre-study is overkill?
I came from a childcare background with no medical experience and passed AMAP on my first attempt. The 16-hour training is pretty thorough if you pay attention and don't tune out during the documentation sections. Most people who fail do so because they don't take the mock competency check seriously enough.
One thing nobody told me beforehand: the practical skills check-off is often stricter than the written part. My evaluator marked me off for not verbally confirming the resident's name before administering even though I did it - just quietly. Make sure every step is visible and audible to the observer.
Also bring your own pen. Sounds dumb but our training site ran out and it caused chaos during the written portion.
Sixty-day timeline is totally achievable. I've known people who completed the whole thing in a long weekend intensive plus one follow-up session. The harder part honestly is getting your agency to set up the supervised hours afterward - that administrative piece can drag if your supervisor isn't organized.
The written portion in my state was 50 questions and I finished in about 45 minutes. It's not open book - at least not in the program I went through. The questions are mostly scenario-based: a resident is prescribed X, what do you do if Y happens. If you understand the five rights cold and the error-reporting chain, you'll be fine.
Pre-reading definitely helps. Even just reviewing basic drug categories and common side effects for psychiatric and seizure medications will make the classroom content click faster.