Kookaburra
Forum Lieutenant
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I've seen lots of people advocate for increased education for paramedics, and as a student myself, I can't agree more. (I'm a nerd, I'm always sad when the lab/lectures are over, heh) My program is OK (though the CC it's done through is sooo bureaucratic. I already have my 4-year Bachelor's, but I still have to take all the BS breadth classes to get a lower 2 year Associate's Degree, how does that make sense?! Another woman in my class has a Master's in mathematics and engineering, and she's in the same boat, having to take lots of low level classes to fulfill the breadth stuff.)
I was wondering because at first when I saw all of the suggestions that people take college A&P classes I was very confused - my program requires a year of A&P to even apply. Is it not the same in other programs?
So, my question is - what would your ideal Paramedic education program look like? What are the really good programs out there, and what policies/procedures do they share?
My program looks like this:
1st year - EMTB classes, EMS rescue and communications classes, College Writing, Human Relations, Medical Terminology, A&P, Chemistry.
2nd year - Paramedic classes/clinicals, more human relations, health classes, public speaking, intro to computer science.
We use the Brady Book, and also have the ACLS Advanced Cardiovascular Life support book, The 60-second EMT, Math for Meds, and a few other books. Oh, and the local protocols are part of our exams and quizzes. We have 8 hours of lecture and 6 hours of lab a week.
I was wondering because at first when I saw all of the suggestions that people take college A&P classes I was very confused - my program requires a year of A&P to even apply. Is it not the same in other programs?
So, my question is - what would your ideal Paramedic education program look like? What are the really good programs out there, and what policies/procedures do they share?
My program looks like this:
1st year - EMTB classes, EMS rescue and communications classes, College Writing, Human Relations, Medical Terminology, A&P, Chemistry.
2nd year - Paramedic classes/clinicals, more human relations, health classes, public speaking, intro to computer science.
We use the Brady Book, and also have the ACLS Advanced Cardiovascular Life support book, The 60-second EMT, Math for Meds, and a few other books. Oh, and the local protocols are part of our exams and quizzes. We have 8 hours of lecture and 6 hours of lab a week.