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No new grad nurse that I know of can function effectively in the ED or ICU without having a fairly extensive orientation to that environment. I would expect that a Paramedic, even though their training is quite specific, would still have to go through a somewhat modified version of the ED or ICU orientation course before they could be ready to function safely in those environments.
While I'd be OK in the prehospital environment, I have no illusions about my ability to function as well in the ED on my own, with my own patients. In that environment, at this point, I'd suck...
Probably a bit of both. I'm most definitely saying that it's not because of ability. I do have quite the extensive background in sports med which, in some ways, goes way beyond either but also is lacking in some areas due to specialization.But the true question is, is that due to your 'lack of education' as a Paramedic, or just like a new grad nurse, lack of experience in that area?
I'm of the firm belief that new grad Paramedics can be as good as (if not better) than new grad nurses in certain areas of the hospital that can benefit from their specialization, like the cath lab.
I would have enjoyed a good course in pathophys... unfortunately, my sports med program (and most I know of) focused on injury physiology. Paramedic didn't get into pathophys much. And knowing where and how Paramedics got started, I'm not surprised that many of those same invasive procedures are in the realm of the attending and "doclings"... yet there are some procedures that I've seen in training that are out of my scope as a Paramedic.6 months would make any paramedic golden, as long as they were willing to go home and read a med/surg book on the different disease pathologies encountered.
As i said previously, the courses are almost exactly the same. What the paramedic would be shocked to find is that most of their invasive procedures would now only be the realm of attendings and their doclings.
One of the issues I can see coming down the pike, should Paramedics in general learn pathophys and a few other things, is that they'd want to expand into other clinical areas and Physicians might take a good look at them as a "PA-Lite"... and nurses wouldn't like that precisely because these providers would be encroaching upon the nurse's traditional territories - bedside and in-clinic care. Expand the education more into critical care (way beyond the 120 hour courses) and suddenly you've got providers that can do ICU-ICU level transport without having an RN along for the ride or you'd have Paramedics functioning in the ICU under their own licenses, not under the supervision of RNs and somehow... I don't think the nurses would like that very much.