
Essential Duties and Responsibilities
Education & Staff Development
Clinical Practice & Quality Support
Simulation & Skills Training
Regulatory & Compliance
Collaboration & Communication
Professional Development
Other Responsibilities
Supervisory Responsibilities
This position has no direct supervisory responsibilities but provides functional leadership through:
Qualifications
To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential duty satisfactorily. The requirements listed below are representative of the knowledge, skill, and/or ability required. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
Education and/or Experience
Position Requirements, Licenses, Certifications, Registrations
Language Skills
Ability to read, write, speak, and understand English sufficiently to perform job duties. Ability to write routine reports and correspondence, and procedure manuals. Ability to speak effectively before customers, patients, families and employees of the organization. Ability to effectively present information and respond to questions from learners.
Physical Demands
The physical demands described are representative of those required to perform the essential functions of this position. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
This position requires a combination of sedentary, light, and moderate physical activity. The employee frequently stands, walks, and sits throughout the workday while providing education, observing clinical practice, supporting skills labs, and completing administrative duties. The employee frequently bends, stoops, kneels, crouches, and reaches to demonstrate skills, access equipment, and observe perioperative workflows.
The role requires frequent use of hands and fingers for fine motor tasks including skills demonstrations, equipment handling, computer use, and documentation. The employee must be able to lift, push, pull, and carry up to 20 pounds frequently, and up to 50 pounds occasionally, using proper body mechanics and assistance as appropriate.
Specific vision abilities include close and distance vision, depth perception, peripheral vision, color vision, and the ability to adjust focus. Effective hearing, verbal communication, sustained attention, and the ability to respond to interruptions are required. The employee must be able to tolerate intermittent physical activity, time pressures, emotional stress, and high-acuity clinical environments.
Work Environment
The work environment characteristics described are representative of those encountered while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
The employee works in perioperative and administrative settings, including operating rooms, PACU, SDS, skills labs, simulation areas, offices, and meeting spaces. The role involves routine exposure to bloodborne pathogens, infectious diseases, bodily fluids, and regulated medical waste, requiring consistent use of PPE and adherence to infection prevention standards.
The employee may be exposed to moving mechanical parts, medical equipment, electrical hazards, sterilants, disinfectants, trace anesthetic gases, and radiation consistent with perioperative practice. Workspaces may include restricted areas, variable temperatures, low lighting, and controlled airflow environments.
Noise levels are typically moderate, with occasional increases related to alarms, equipment, and simulation activities. The role may involve exposure to unpleasant sights or odors and participation in stressful clinical education or performance improvement activities requiring emotional resilience and professional composure.

St. Anthony Regional Hospital & Nursing Home is proud of its rich history, which dates back to 1905 when Reverend Joseph Kuemper founded the hospital, with the help of the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration, from LaCrosse, Wisconsin. Today, St. Anthony Regional Hospital, along with its medical staff, serves communities in West Central Iowa.
Patients at St. Anthony Regional Hospital have access to physicians in many specialties, state-of-the-art equipment and up-to-date treatment procedures. Cost-effective care is provided in an atmosphere which reflects the institution’s Franciscan heritage and the values of the healing ministry of Christ, quality, patient/customer satisfaction, integrity, and high performance standards. Emphasis is placed on patient services, rehabilitation, education and wellness, recognizing an individual’s physical, spiritual, and psychosocial needs.
St. Anthony Regional Hospital is a Critical Access Hospital with a connected 79 bed nursing home. The hospital is a member of the American Hospital Association and the Iowa Hospitals Association, and has been designated as one of sixteen regional hospitals in Iowa by the Iowa State Department of Health.