This reeks of that zombie prepper website... Where the guy had the Stomp bag full of ALS meds. :/
Eh. I'll bow out of this mess.
Right behind you...
This reeks of that zombie prepper website... Where the guy had the Stomp bag full of ALS meds. :/
Eh. I'll bow out of this mess.
...and he dies from an NSTEMI. The end.
Wow, checked out that bag. I got 2 similar but in od green. I am more than likely going to run into a traumatic injury than anything else. Anyone have any review on the KED. seems better than the stretcher I have.
They have epi and atropine, they're good. No worries, man
I'll go find a telemetrist (telemetry person) to talk to. My knowledge seems to be out an EMTs league, no offence, just not something you do.
Seems my knowledge goes beyond an EMT, no offence, it's just not something you have to do.
And nobody ever said working a code in the wilderness was impossible...what we were saying was it's not always practical.
I'm not going to give up. I was just hoping for a legal way to obtain said drugs. Seems my knowledge goes beyond an EMT, no offence, it's just not something you have to do.
Handling a code in the sticks is not impossible, just not favorable.
Ok. I'll answer the OP's question. Yes, there's a long, but legal way to achieve said medications. First, you need 90 semester units of undergrad that includes a year of biology, year of general chemistry, year of organic chemistry, year of calc/statistics, and year of physics. Take the MCAT, apply to graduate school through the AMCAS and/or AACOMAS. Go to 4 years of graduate school. Next complete a year of paid internship. Now just apply for the appropriate licenses and you too can carry pretty much what ever drugs you want.
Thats what i wanted to hear (not really) lot of hoops to jump through.
Are there any 68 whiskeys on this site?
Thats what i wanted to hear (not really) lot of hoops to jump through.
Are there any 68 whiskeys on this site?
68 whisky is responsible for a lot more than trauma. You're right though, civilian and military are night and day different. What I was proposing is not unheard of though. Like I said those spec. ops medics hold people for days while in transport (very rare) its not something i did personally.