Switching Career Advice: How Future-Proof Is MLT?
Hi everyone! Sorry this post got longer than I wanted, but I would really appreciate insight from students, professionals, instructors, or anyone involved in these fields. 🙏
Background
I’m a 30-year-old from Canada coming from a software development background. I worked in tech for about 7 years, mostly in front-end development. For the past 2–3 years, I’ve been thinking about changing careers, but I didn’t seriously consider it until I got laid off last year.
The company I worked for started reducing developers as they relied more heavily on AI tools, especially for front-end work. I told myself maybe it was just bad luck, so I found another job. But after only 6 months, that company started having budget issues and cut staff as well. This company relied heavily on AI as well. Since I was still newer, they kept the more senior employees instead 😭
At that point, I started feeling like this might be a sign that I genuinely want a different path.
Why I want to leave tech
I think I’ve simply fallen out of love with the industry.
I used to genuinely enjoy building things and learning new technologies, but over the past few years I’ve constantly felt anxious about layoffs, job security, and always needing to prove myself. In tech, especially SaaS, layoffs can happen very suddenly depending on budgets or investors.
You’re expected to constantly learn new tools, adapt quickly, and work faster to stay competitive, which I honestly didn’t mind. Overtime is also very common in software, and while I understood that came with the job, it’s usually unpaid and you just get pizza and a “good job” 😅 The hiring process has also become exhausting, with 5–6 interview stages, coding challenges, and technical screens becoming the norm.
AI also changed how I feel about the industry. At first I loved it, but now it feels like companies are using it to push people to do more work faster while hiring fewer employees.
Why nursing (LPN/RN)
Nursing was actually my original plan back in high school, but life circumstances got in the way.
I wouldn’t say I’m super extroverted, but I’ve always been comfortable working with people. I worked as a server for over 5 years during university, and I also worked as a summer student in a senior healthcare facility.
I completely understand nursing is MUCH more mentally and physically demanding than serving, I’m not comparing them equally! I just mean that I genuinely don’t mind interacting with people, and I think I do enjoy taking care of others. If I pursued nursing, I’d probably want to work in senior care eventually.
Right now, I’m considering starting with LPN due to financial constraints, then potentially bridging into RN later. RN programs where I live are also very competitive to get into.
Why MLT
I’ve always loved science-related subjects, and coming from a non-customer-facing career, MLT initially felt like a perfect transition.
I also don’t mind repetitive work. I actually enjoy being able to focus quietly on tasks and work in a lab. I also like the idea of helping patients behind the scenes, even if I’m not directly interacting with them. ☺️
Of course, I know MLT is still stressful in its own way, and I’m not trying to minimize either profession.
What I’m really trying to figure out
I think I already understand the general nature of the work in both professions. What I’m struggling with more is the long-term logistics and stability.
- How do overtime, evening shifts, weekends, and work-life balance compare between the two?
- Which career feels more sustainable long-term?
- Which has better job stability and future-proofing?
- How realistic is career growth in MLT compared to nursing?
- MLTs, are there already discussions in the field about AI and automation affecting jobs long-term?
For salary, 6 figures is pretty common in software, but honestly, I value stability and meaningful work more now than chasing higher salaries.
Right now I’m leaning more toward MLT, but my biggest concern overall is future-proofing, and maybe I’m focusing on that too much because of my experience in tech. 😭
I know automation has existed in labs for years already, and I understand AI is more likely to become a tool rather than completely replacing people. But coming from software development, we were told the exact same thing. That AI would “just help us work faster.” What ended up happening was companies simply needed fewer people to do the same amount of work.
So I guess I’m trying to understand whether people in the MLT field generally see AI as a manageable evolution of the profession, or if there are genuine concerns about reduced staffing opportunities in the future.
I know nursing feels more future-proof because patient interaction and hands-on care are much harder to replace.
I know both professions are difficult in completely different ways, and both would be a massive change from my current career. But whichever path I choose, I genuinely want to commit fully to it and give it my all 🥹
I’d really appreciate any thoughts, experiences, advice, or honesty from people in either field. Thank you so much.