I guess i'm just banking on the fact the I'm gonna retire doing what I do now. Optimistic maybe?
That's great. Hopefully you manage to stay injury-free and are able to retire as a Paramedic. Have you started a retirement plan?
I was on track to recieve a bachelor's in EMS administration when I got the job I was getting my degree for. Could I go back some day and finish up? sure. Do I need to? No. Got my dream job already.
I'm glad you do have your dream job. It's wonderful that you really like what you're doing.
My point is this exactly. A medic with a degree from a program does the minimum hours, with rural departments, will get used to it over time. A program with legit calls that goes above and beyond in hours is going to pump out paramedics ready to be self sufficient. And if it's a well run program, with the proper pre-requisits (anatomy, physiology, math, science ect.) they'll have the knowledge they need make their own judgements about patient care. Continueing education goes without saying here as well. You can have a phd in emergency medicine and I hope you still study throughout your career. I haven't stopped studying and don't plan to.
How is a medic going to understand a medication better than I do? I have the same requirements as anyone else in knowing what they do and how they do it.
That's the thing. The medic with a solid education in the basic medical sciences is going to understand physiology a lot better than a medic that's only been to a school that does not require any A&P. Paramedic school can't adequately teach the material in the time allotted to reach the depth attained in a stand-alone, college level A&P course.
That's nice that you didn't have to crack a book. I had to bust my butt to pass with an actual understanding of the material so I could apply it in my patient care. And I was only able to do that when I had a clear head and could actually remember my studies, which came from the experience I gained from clinicals.
That's great that you had to bust your butt to understand the material. Here's why I hardly had to crack the book. I took college level A&P, chemistry, biomechanics, exercise physiology, therapeutic modalities, several assessment courses, and quite a bit more than that. You see a road rash. I see a lot more than that in that injury. I see many of the processes the body uses to repair that injury and what I need to do to help it. You see knee pain, I can accurately determine what structures are damaged, how badly, and short of surgery, I can manage that all the way back to competition-level performance.
Did you have any experience as an EMT before you went to medic school?
Yes, I did. I was able to do those things above long before I went to medic school. I had about a year and a half EMT experience before starting medic school because of the application cycles involved. About 1/2 that call volume was emergency runs, not IFT runs.
Woah woah woah. Let's not take personal jabs here. I'm not saying that your education isn't worth every dime you paid for it. I just came from a school that idolized another because they offered a Paramedic Bachelor degree. Now students from the latter ride in my ambulance and I would rather have a fresh paramedic from my school over a medic from theirs any day. Dispite the fact that students from my school have less pre-requisits to get into the program, and you don't HAVE to graduate with any type of degree, they out perform students from the school that requires a bachelor's degree when you graduate the program.
And what I (and others) are getting at is that those students will eventually catch up and surpass you and others that graduated your program because the have a very broad understanding of what's going on and they'll be able to think outside the protocol box. Without a good, solid education, you won't be able to step outside the protocols. You won't get past psychomotor skills.