New to the forum I am hesitant to share my thoughts, but contributing is what makes a forum a forum. In answering the threads initiating question, I personally wouldn't have been a part of EMS without the EMT-B Certification.
Now having said that my experience was while I was living in rural Wyoming where a Paramedic was unheard of. Frankly if you were fortunate to have an Intermediate on board, you also were blessed. Right, Wrong or indifferent, that was largely how rural Wyoming was.
Oft times you were lucky if you could get a ambulance staffed mid-day or heaven forbid need an additional ambulance. Our Fire dept had a roster of 54 volunteers and there primary responsibility was for Fire suppression, Extrications, and HazMat, obviously simply put. I was only one of 5 EMT's that had been cross trained enough to provide relatively proficiently play two roles volunteering for both services. We werent compensated for helping our cities citizens, we did it because if we did not, Hell there wouldn't be anyone there to help in times of need. A town of 10,000 can only support so many Nurses and the reason they were Nurses is because they got paid, and they chose to work in a semi-controlled environment.
The part I admired the most was that when Police, Fire and EMS were all on scene together, we worked together. There was no indifference, we were all there to serve, protect and do all we could to sustain life. Having been out of the Emergency Service for nearly 15 years, I have been revisiting the idea entering the field again. I have been trolling and reading the posts and wonder to myself what the worth in returning is. It would seem that becoming a BLS provider the luster of support has diminished so to speak. It also bespeaks itself that Paramedicine, Nursing, and Doctors are the only ones proficient enough to give any care worthy of its salt.