PERCOM breaks their Medic program into three courses. Everyone in their program, AEMT or Paramedic, follows this basic flow:
1. Anatomy and Physiology for the Paramedic (you can be exempted from this if you submit a college transcript with an A&P class)
2. Paramedic 1 - This class covers the didactic and skills requirements for AEMT, plus some paramedic stuff.
Paramedic 1 Skills and Clinicals - Once you complete the Pharmacology lessons of Paramedic 1, you are eligible to start the skills and clinical portion of the course. You attend two weekends (4 days total) of skills training and then another weekend of NR skills testing. To be eligible to start clinicals you must complete one of the skills training sessions first. Clinicals for Paramedic 1 are ~30 days.
AMET program stops here. Students in the Medic track have the option to stop here and test for NR AEMT, or go straight through to Paramedic 2.
Take Paramedic 1 Final Exam.
3. Paramedic 2- This class builds off of the stuff you learned in Paramedic 1, and prepares you to be a Paramedic. This class includes more advanced cardiology stuff and pharmacology.
Paramedic 2 Skills and Clinicals - You can start Paramedic 2 clinicals once you complete the cardiology and EKG portion of the class. You attend two weekends (4 days total) of skills training and then another weekend of NR skills testing. To be eligible to start clinicals you must complete one of the skills training sessions first. Clinicals are ~15 days, and the last 92hrs are spent with you acting as the lead medic on a truck.
Paramedic 2 final exam, and exit interview with one of the program MDs.
Program Ends Here
PERCOM will issue you a clinical uniform. If you are in EMS or healthcare you probably have everything you need. Tuition does include books. They are mailed to you at no cost, and include an access code for the online book. I have never used the online book though.
Clinical rotations can be done at a site you request, and I have never heard of them denying a specific site request. If you are out of state, PERCOM has a network of clinical sites across the US, so you might get lucky and be able to do most of your clinicals from wherever you call home. There are lots of clinical sites in Texas, DFW included.
P1 is 30 Days of mainly hospital (ER, OR, L&D, Respiratory Therapy) rotations
P2 is 15 Days of ambo rotations and hospital (ICU and Cardiac Cath) rotations
You can wait to do your clinicals in one big block after you are eligible in P2. Clinicals are not required to be completed for P1 before you are eligible to move on to P2.
Also, I see you are pre-nursing. If you have completed any nursing clinicals PERCOM can count some of those towards your required hosptial rotations.
Program has been good. Best advice I can give is communicate communicate communicate with your instructor. If anything over-communicate with them. It was hard to get used to having to communicate with a teacher via email. Remember, apart from what you tell them, they have very little idea about how you are feeling about the material, so its hard for them to help unless you reach out first. IT IS WORK! Don't expect to get off easy because its online.
PERCOM has a 100% NREMT-P pass rate for a reason. It is WORK. I CANNOT STRESS THIS ENOUGH!