Fish, could you elaborate on that thought?
Sure,
Mind you this is just my personel opinion:
Brand new Paramedics who had worked as an EMT B or EMT I prior to becoming a Paramedic tend to have better call management skills that someone who did not. The knowledge base tends to be no different as they have recieved the same education, but call management and critical thinking under pressure seems to be different. That being said, within a year or so the Medic who did not have the experience quickly catches up.
Simply put, by the time I was out of Medic school I had already been on double digit CPR calls, shootings, Stabbings, bad CHF, Allergic Reactions, etc as an EMT. So I didn't have the OMG shock of a critical call plus the ALS TEAM LEAD decision making responsibilities thrown at me at the same time, I was already exposed to sick and injured patients so when I saw them as a Medic I was able to stay cool calm and level headed and make good decisions and prioritize correctly, that seems to be the case with new Medics I see coming in.
I was on my first CPR call as an 18 year old, and Graduated Paramedic school just as I turned 21.
Am I saying you will not be successful unless you go the route I did? heck no I am not, I was forced to go that route because the area I went to school at required a years xperience. Medics I work with who did not go that route do just fine.