All advertisements I've seen at Hershey at the very least require EMT-B and a year experience, however most advertisements lately have been EMT-A or I with a year experience. Great place for traumas, sucky place for medical and that's my personal experience with my own children. We waited 10 hours in a hallway to have them tell me oh he's having an allergic reaction, give him prednisone. The child had scarlet fever (aka strep rash) and needed antibiotics. Oh well, doctors office the following morning fixed things up.
However, a trauma code there is a sight to behold, and I've only done one as an EMT that was actually a preterm delivery on the steps of the hospital (haven't done traumatic injury there yet). As soon as we came in w/ lights and sirens (mom was rupturing internally we think) the ER techs flocked from the bay to meet us, did they're best to help us stabalize mom and baby on the litter, yelled "get them inside" where we were whisked to a neonatal team, an obstetrical team and three other sets of nurses/PAs and what not. They went into action told us to step back for a second (just get out of their way) as they worked their magic and everyone was officially stabalizing within minutes of getting all the proper equipment available in the ER. It was crazy. In the end I was handed some paper scrubs and a decon room, but it was like watching a well rehearsed dance as each crew went into action on their patient. Very...very...cool. I'm told for traumatic injuries, they will drag you into the xray/ct scan room whatever imaging room and have you report as they move the patient and start taking pics and that it really works like clockwork, but I've not seen Hershey in action in that capacity.
So that's my experience with Hershey. They say each hospital is known for their specialty around here. Hershey is the peds hospital and trauma, Harrisburg is known as the cardiac hospital, Allentown burns and Geisinger I believe has the hyperbaric chamber.