I wish there was a reason to do it but it's really not incentivized to do so. My state [CO] you can apply for a license over a certificate with a relevant bachelors but doesn't add any additional scope. Some municipal departments might pay more with a degree but no change in responsibility or...
You'd probably have to look into the individual colleges in your area. You'd likely have to take some additional general electives to satisfy an associates degree with credit for your paramedic. I had enough credits from previous endeavors that the pre-reqs, my medic courses and taking one math...
I came into the career around 30, so some advice from my experience:
Apply to one of the hospitals around you. Most have some kind of entry level CNA/PCA/PCT role that they often provide training for. You'll do things like take vitals for the nurses, help with patient care, maybe some...
I think mine are going on 3-4 years and holding up pretty well. I think I got them when I started working ER out here. They did their fair share of Orthoglass duty and still going strong on the truck.
Paramedic - $57-62k/year; EMT $47-52k/year
48/96, 911 only
Resumes can be sent to: chief@southparkambulance.com
https://southparkambulance.com/jobs/
Located in Park County on the Eastern Slope of the Continental Divide of the Central Rockies.
The Headquarters Station is in Fairplay...
Not to resurrect old threads, curious for anyone in the region that might have a better understanding of ACFRs recent CBA and restructuring?
My medic school is on-board with us doing our internship portion out of state if we have an agency willing to do it. I've been looking pretty hard at...
I haven't been in Colorado long enough and I've only worked for my agency and the ER, so it's hard to have a real opinion good or bad on services. There's been some good suggestions here. A lot of it is just narrowing down: do you want to work in the city/suburbs with a higher volume or more...
Really just depends on what kind of EMS role you want to get into. Plenty of options on the front range but as an EMT you may end up driving or IFT type stuff more than anything. In the foothills you have a variety of services largely running 48/96 which makes the commute decent. You'll likely...
Not in any hurry to relocate but just curious about some decent services for a (future) medic in the sunshine state. Some of the ones I am interested in so far are Gadsden and Leon County in the big bend. Alachua down near Gainesville, especially interested in how their single role Rescue LT...
I did PRN with them for about 8 months in Denver. It's a decent gig, especially for a newer EMT. Would definitely reccomend over an IFT gig. You're partnered with a PA or NP on 10 hour shifts. You definitely get to see a wide variety of patients, sick and not sick. Good chance to really practice...
Hiring full time medics, accepting applications for part-time EMT.
Medics: $57,000-62,000 DOE
EMT w/ IV Cert: $47,000-52,000 DOE
District paid health plan, no cost to employee.
48/96, 911 only for 1200 sq mile rural district. 3 crews/shift, roughly 1200 calls/year. Denver Metro protocols...
We cover ~1200 square miles and have plenty of cell and radio dead zones. Our Doc has made it clear we can use our best judgement based on our training and existing protocols if we can't reach a doc for an order. Just document well and justify based on needs of the patient and follow up with an...