EMSpursuit
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I had a friend who was a Medic in the service and said his license wouldn't transfer to civilian? Is that true?
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No, V. A military medic in anything other than an SF unit will not get the opportunity to practice or learn. A single-military Paramedic educated the Army way would be the very definition of a medic mill.
I have to work part-time to even begin to maintain my skillswts.
OP answer is not without meeting civilian standards. No idea about credits for mil experience. Talk to your local EMSA.
CONUS bases are trying to shed most on-base inpatient and non-Doc in a box level stuff, have been since 1994. Makes sense to get rid of as much EMS as possible too, especially since the ER most likely will be in civilian setting.
I've talked with an ex-Army medic during my ER rotation, he is doing his Medic internship. I just learned that he had to do it all over again (starting at EMT). Sad but true, "No credits" he said.
Why is it sad?
Different patient populations, different health issues, different standards of care...
Maybe because he was a 4 year medic, and he has to do it all over again in the civilian world. Yeah, their protocols are different alright!
If your friend has not taken the NREMT-B exam and therefore doesn't have an NREMT number, that's true. The military-only medic training probably doesn't cover the full curriculum required to be certified as a civilian EMT-B, even though aspects of the military training go way beyond that basic level.I had a friend who was a Medic in the service and said his license wouldn't transfer to civilian? Is that true?