Every allied health credential issued or recognized in West Virginia carries an ongoing continuing-education obligation. Hour totals vary materially by profession — across the ten roles tracked on this site, the average obligation in West Virginia works out to roughly 24 contact hours per renewal cycle, with stricter professions running noticeably higher than that average. West Virginia is regarded as broadly typical, with continuing-education obligations that align with national norms for each profession. The single most important continuing-education decision a credential holder makes each cycle is timing: completing required hours in the first half of the renewal cycle protects against scheduling conflicts, audit anxiety, and the late fees that result from any unanticipated personal or professional disruption near the deadline.
Hour Requirements by Profession
| Profession | Renewal cycle | CE hours required | Renewal fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medical Assistant | 2 years | 20 contact hours | $60 |
| Phlebotomist | 3 years | 12 contact hours | $80 |
| Emergency Medical Technician | 2 years | 60 contact hours | $75 |
| Surgical Technologist | 2 years | 30 contact hours | $110 |
| Radiologic Technologist | 2 years | 24 contact hours | $120 |
| Respiratory Therapist | 1 year | 20 contact hours | $150 |
| Pharmacy Technician | 2 years | 30 contact hours | $90 |
| Dental Assistant | 3 years | 18 contact hours | $40 |
| EKG Technician | 2 years | 12 contact hours | $50 |
| Sterile Processing Technician | 1 year | 18 contact hours | $80 |
What Counts
In West Virginia, continuing education for allied health credentials is generally defined as documented contact hours from approved providers. Approved providers typically include the credentialing body itself (each major certifying body — AAMA, AMT, NHA, ASCP, ARRT, NBRC, PTCB, NBSTSA, DANB, HSPA, CCI, NREMT — operates an approved-provider registry); accredited continuing education providers in nursing or pharmacy education that have agreements with the relevant allied health body; accredited academic institutions; and approved professional associations. Common categories that count include live in-person courses and conference sessions; recorded webinars with assessment; journal clubs with documented attendance; in-service training delivered by an employer that has been registered as an approved provider; and a defined cap of self-study activity. Activities that do not count without specific pre-approval include staff meetings, basic life support recertification beyond the initial cycle, and attendance at vendor product demonstrations without formal continuing education accreditation.
State-Specific Mandatory Topics
West Virginia layers a small set of mandatory topic requirements on top of the credentialing body's hour totals for several professions. These mandates are revised periodically by the legislature or the responsible board and currently most commonly include:
- Opioid prescribing, dispensing, and abuse awareness — required for pharmacy technicians and most patient-facing clinical roles in West Virginia, typically a one-to-three contact-hour module per renewal cycle.
- Human-trafficking awareness and recognition — required for healthcare workers in patient-facing roles, typically a one-to-two contact-hour module.
- Child-abuse and elder-abuse mandatory reporting — required at initial licensure and refreshed each renewal cycle for credential holders working with vulnerable populations.
- Cultural competency and implicit bias — required by a growing number of states for allied health roles in patient-facing settings.
- Infection prevention and control — required for sterile processing technicians, surgical technologists, and dental assistants.
- State jurisprudence refresher — required by some West Virginia boards for a state-specific scope-of-practice update at each renewal.
The credentialing body's hour total and the state's mandatory topics must both be satisfied to renew. Where the state-mandated topic also satisfies a content area required by the credentialing body — for example, an opioid module that meets a national patient-safety hour requirement — the same hours can usually count toward both requirements.
Documentation Discipline
The single most common cause of renewal trouble in West Virginia — as in every state — is poor recordkeeping. The credentialing body and the West Virginia board both recommend that holders maintain certificates of completion for the full current renewal cycle plus at least one additional cycle, since audit selection occurs after the renewal cycle closes. A simple practice is to scan every certificate of completion immediately upon receipt and store all certificates in a dated cloud folder organized by renewal cycle. When an audit notice arrives, you should be able to produce a complete electronic packet within the response window — typically thirty days — without needing to retrieve paper records or contact past providers. Failure to respond to an audit, or producing incomplete documentation, has the same consequence as failing to complete the required hours: the credential is at risk.
Late Renewal and Reinstatement
West Virginia offers some form of late-renewal grace period for every allied health credential it regulates, but the terms vary. A short lapse — typically thirty to ninety days past the expiration date — usually requires only payment of a late fee in addition to the standard renewal fee, plus completion of any continuing-education hours that were due during the original cycle. Beyond the grace period, the credential holder is normally moved to "lapsed" or "expired" status and may be barred from practice until reinstatement is granted. Reinstatement after extended lapses can require completion of additional continuing-education beyond the standard cycle requirement, payment of a reinstatement fee in addition to back renewal fees, and in some cases resitting one or more components of the original certifying examination. Avoiding this scenario is the strongest argument for completing renewal requirements early in each cycle.