Just curious, why the heck does EMS think that it needs some sort of "special" anatomy and physiology course and that it's too good to take the same anatomy and physiology courses that the other health care professionals take?
Just curious, why the heck does EMS think that it needs some sort of "special" anatomy and physiology course and that it's too good to take the same anatomy and physiology courses that the other health care professionals take?
I don't see the need for a "special" EMS A&P and doesn't make much sense to me either..... but I think they try to tailor the A&P that is most relevant to the conditions most often encountered.
The same reason we allow those that can't read above elementary level into a health care profession, again the same reason most do not use but one text book that science level is about 6-10'th grade level. Why EMS journals are the only medical journals with "pictures" in them....
Never understood why we would expect a mechanic to know the parts and working of an automobile to repair it but not expect a health professional to know the workings of the human body.