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  1. L

    Eager to Learn

    I've come to the conclusion through this thread that you're right. One year is probably good enough experience at a minimum, but I still don't believe you should jump straight into paramedic with no field experience as a basic first. \ One year is okay, I still think more than one would be...
  2. L

    Help deciding on emt-intermediate or paramedic

    I became an EMT February 2010 and am finishing my paramedic program in 4 weeks. If you know you want to go medic and are willing to put in the time and effort to pass, why bother with intermediate? I live in a small town and the closest program for me is a 90-minute drive. Just be sure that you...
  3. L

    1 Year Later

    I became certified as an EMT-B in February of 2010, but was still in high school at the time. Like you, I did well in class and testing. I worked a little as a basic doing mostly transfers that summer and also like you, went off to college. There were a few months where I didn't use my cert...
  4. L

    Eager to Learn

    Yes, we assessed those patients, too. Yes, we discussed airways and had plenty of access to anesthesiologists before, during, and after the actual intubation should any questions arise outside of their instruction. We spent PLENTY of time with expecting mothers assessing, monitoring, and caring...
  5. L

    Eager to Learn

    I agree that EMT class is oversimplified, but it is still the foundation. Basics effectively serve a purpose using the information and skills presented to them in EMT class. I don't agree that EMT class doesn't teach the basics of ALS knowledge, however. Maybe you'd like to elaborate on that...
  6. L

    Eager to Learn

    Absolutely assessing my patients both in the hospital and on the ambulance during clinicals and performing the necessary interventions. In the ER, we did IV's, blood draws, 12-leads, meds, yes. We also had nurses to supervise. We would carry out everything they needed for a patient (within...
  7. L

    Eager to Learn

    You're right. That is how it should be. No one said anything about thinking what basic interventions a patient may need vs. advanced ones. I know what you were trying to say. I think maybe you misunderstood what we were discussing. On scene, a medic should absolutely just see what needs done...
  8. L

    Eager to Learn

    Right. I've done my paramedic clinical hours in those parts of the hospital, too. And they're great. Yes, you get experience during medic class. Yes, yes, yes. Again. I still believe it is beneficial to the student to be proficient (including field experience) in those assessments before their...
  9. L

    Eager to Learn

    The least I've seen required (or recommended, I believe was how some worded it) to apply for a medic program is 1 year. The majority 2. Like I said, maybe it's my area. But I've never heard anyone preaching jumping from EMT straight to medic is better than getting field experience first. Once...
  10. L

    Eager to Learn

    I'm glad you run circles around those medics. I know plenty of fantastic medics that believe that and can't believe anyone would argue it, honestly. Basics work all the 911 around here. For at least the 75mile radius I'm very familiar with. I am absolutely comfortable with being in charge and...
  11. L

    Eager to Learn

    Was replying to a reply to Christopher. My bad. Forgot to click "quote".
  12. L

    Eager to Learn

    Hmm.. Maybe that's an "in my area"-thing. It's something that's preached on around here. "You can't be a good medic without being a good basic first" Idea being that BLS should always come before ALS. Every patient doesn't need drugs and electricity. Sometimes simply opening an airway does...
  13. L

    Eager to Learn

    I strongly disagree. Field experience is MUCH more than driving, radio, and cots. It's putting what you learned in class to the streets and learning how things are really done. I had both a fantastic EMT and paramedic program, but class doesn't cover everything. You can practice a million trauma...
  14. L

    Eager to Learn

    I am 4 weeks from finishing the didactic portion of my paramedic program. I would absolutely suggest focusing on field experience. Textbooks and classes are a plus, but you can't replace field experience. I was an EMT for 3 years before my medic program and sometimes still wish I'd gotten more...
  15. L

    Outside the EMT Book, What we SHOULD HAVE learned

    I think it needs to evolve with the times, yes. I'm very aware (though I'm a full-time college student and don't work much and when I do, usually non-emergent) that most calls don't really require an ambulance, but to those patients that do, they're very glad we're there. EMS needs to stay EMS...
  16. L

    Outside the EMT Book, What we SHOULD HAVE learned

    Don't get me wrong. The more education, the better IMO, but I also think EMS needs to stay EMS. If we get too bogged down with knowing every little disease, I feel like we're going to lost sight of the things we can actually deal with. It's like a balancing game. I'd always err on the side of...
  17. L

    Outside the EMT Book, What we SHOULD HAVE learned

    My pre-reqs for medic include: College Algebra (M014+), Anatomy (A215) Physiology (P215), Psychology (P100+), Lifespan Development (Not prereq, but recommended -F150), EMT-B, Elementary Composition (W131), Oral Communication (C121,122), and Sociology (S100) off the top of my head. I can see...
  18. L

    Ind. firefighter-medic dies of heart attack in station

    From ems1.com Wife and 2 young children, 33 yo ffmedic died of MI just after returning from 2 calls. Co-workers worked him for a bit then took him in before he was pronounced dead. Read the full story at...
  19. L

    EMS Educational Methodology Course

    ...I certainly hope so.
  20. L

    the 100% directionless thread

    Ick. We had a rollover over the summer here. Drunk driver hit doing 80+... Seat belts:) Good luck with that.
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