Mario1105
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How can i find out if my school is a bad school its a specialty emt program school
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well thanks for the heads up
now u have me really worried there only a 2day a week program with 8sat's for 4 months
The length of the program is a start but only tells you so much, but to be honest the instructors aren't going to make too much of a difference when it comes to BLS. It's all pretty straight forward and a lot of it is just common sense. For what it's worth my program was 2 nights a week for the first semester(the state mandated 120 hours) plus 48 hours of ER clinicals and the second semester was 1 night a week with 48 hours of ride time.
That's not too bad. Our EMT class was 2 nights a week x 4 hours for 17 weeks, 136 hours, plus about 8 Saturdays of 8 hours, 192 hours. (Our program was entirely FD, run by the County ALS service).
From the description, it sounds fine. The min 70% std and similar "automatic fails" are pretty typical. My program req'd a min 80% on every test to pass. The clinical hours seem a bit low (only 8?) but all-in-all, it's probably a decent course. Good luck!
Hints to look at:
How long is your program? An EMT program is meant to be at least 120-160 hours. If that is squeezed into, say, 2-3 weeks, unless there's a specific reasoning for the "acceleration", in all probability, you're not getting a quality of education. Whilst there is nothing amazingly complex about EMT education, you owe it to yourself, and to your patients, to let it sink in and be absorbed, and to be able to spend time gaining proficiency with the various skills, be they bleeding control, splinting, patient exam, extrication.
Same for a medic program, I believe 1,000 hours is the NR 'standard', as such, so extrapolate out. If you have a school that says it can pump you out as a fully fledged EMT-P in 3 months, be wary. You might learn a lot... you might pass your NREMT if you sit it a few days after graduation. Unless you are an outlier, though, in a month's time, especially if you don't have a job, you will have forgotten significant portions of it.
And most services that are worth a damn quickly learn what the 'diploma mill' schools in the surrounding states are, and won't touch you with a bargepole.
Added: You /could/ call your local Fire Departments and ask them not what they recommend (because they'll be reluctant to do so), but where they send their FFs for EMT training, presuming they don't do it in-house/in-county.
That right there explains why a 2 week course stays open!This seems pretty well aimed at one particular school. That school happens to have a very stellar reputation in this and surrounding states.
Many people look at the three month Medic program as a diploma mill and fail to realize it is a program built for MILITARY medics to bridge their certs to civilian; not a zero to hero deal. There is no bridge for military medics! They need to go through a full course and have A&P, like the rest.As far as the two week EMT thing goes, I will say it is popular enough that many FD's in the country send whole class loads of students to it.
That right there explains why a 2 week course stays open!
This seems pretty well aimed at one particular school. That school happens to have a very stellar reputation in this and surrounding states.
Many people look at the three month Medic program as a diploma mill and fail to realize it is a program built for MILITARY medics to bridge their certs to civilian; not a zero to hero deal.
As far as the two week EMT thing goes, I will say it is popular enough that many FD's in the country send whole class loads of students to it.
the problem is, most MILITARY medics have minimal training in medical emergencies. guess what most of your ALS calls involve?Many people look at the three month Medic program as a diploma mill and fail to realize it is a program built for MILITARY medics to bridge their certs to civilian; not a zero to hero deal.
the problem is, most MILITARY medics have minimal training in medical emergencies. guess what most of your ALS calls involve?
Most military medics deal primarily with people 18-30, and how to deal with traumatic injuries they sustain. They don't focus on medical emergencies, because most of your soldiers are pretty healthy.
before you argue this point, please answer this: how many military medics carry oxygen in the field? or a cardiac monitor? do they carry the full spectrum of drugs like civilian medics do?
and not taking anything away from those who do serve in our military, but there is a reason a military medic training is only equal to an EMT in the civilian world