I hear stories of RN's who are fired because of incompetency and stories of RRT's who aren't allowed to work the critical care areas of hospital's because of their competency level. Its simply not just EMS...
Key words are in bold. Those two professions have no problem getting rid of those that don't make the grade.
RT raised their education requirements and also gave those of lesser credentials a time frame to raise their status. Those that didn't take advantage of the generous time period will be shown no mercy.
EMS in may regions continue to praise medic mills for a job well done with keeping a large amount of applicants coming their way.
It would be great to have degreed Paramedics on all primary EMS units but they're are many logistical aspects that sometimes prevent this.
Why then can some states mandate this and others can't?
How can all of the other professions (nursing, RT, PT, OT, SLP, PA, etc) mandate a minimum of a 2 year degree with most of those professions requiring more than a 4 year degree?
When is enough, enough for pre-hospital education to be considered adequate?
Is a two year degree really that unreachable for someone in EMS? Honestly? And you said I was the one who was calling EMS a bunch of dumb providers. I at least believe higher education is obtainable.
What logical excuse do you have for not having a minimum of a 2 year degree for the Paramedic? Do you really think the 3 month medic mills or 1000 hours of "training" is adequate?