Which is why Linuss and I are going to start lobbying for increased education standards in EMS, he just doesn't know it yet.
You wouldn't be the first. Nor the last. But unless you have the one thing that is holding it back, you will never have any better results than many great people who have tried and spent their careers and sometimes lives trying to get the same.
Buy-in from the rank and file.
"What's in it for me?" A common question in the US. A far cry from the generations of people, most of the greatest of which are now gone, who asked "How do we make it better for future generations?"
EMTlife is a microcommunity of EMS providers. We surround ourselves with like minded people and since people like that are who we spend the most time with, both here and in our non-online life, we can easily be fooled into believing we are representative of "everybody."
The fact remains, most US EMS professionals, from people who get an EMS cert to get a FD job, To IFT providers just earning a paycheque instead of driving a taxi or working in a factory, to providers who are so in love with their feeble skills thinking they alone hold the key to saving lives, that they tell new people "the book learnin stuff isn't what happens in the field and you are good at the former, you probably can't do the later."
Now medical directors could hold the key to fixing this by flexing their muscle, but the fact is they don't. What is worse, they voluntarily give up this power for things like state wide protocols. (A medical director friend of mine is currently struggling with this. He can't raise the bar higher because the State fixed the bar in 1990)
As I discovered, even being a physician no longer influences EMS practice. Myself and yet another medical director had a conversation on how her medics don't think she has any "street cred" and so they resist all of her efforts to change.
The rank and file no longer even recognize the street cred of docs who are current or former medics like they used to. With every excuse from "You have forgotten what it is like" to "just because you raised yourself doesn't mean the rest of us want to." My favorite: "This is not a job for smart men, it is a job for working men." (A fancy way to say dumb laborer, and it was multiple EMS providers who said it)
They see Fire and EMS as the last bastions of hope for a vocational laborer to have an admired role in the civilian world. It is not that they are incapable, most I have met are extremely capable. But they lack the desire to change from an age of industry to an age of knowledge. It is not the first time in history this has happened. But they constantly drag people who can transition down. What is worse, most of the leadership believes this, and whether it is moral or not, pleasing your leader is how you become a leader yourself, not by making a stand for what's right. That is how you go about needing to look for another job.
I don't see why EMS CAN'T change, it seems like we don't WANT to change.?
Exactly my point.
I love EMS. I would love to spend my career as a single-roll EMS provider and eventually move into a supervisory and/or QA/QI roll. Add in rescue and TEMS and I'd be a happy camper. Unfortunately, unless something drastic changes or I get lucky, that doesn't seem like it's going to be an option without driving myself to the brink of insanity.
Fortunately, there is an easier solution...
http://www.westcorkrapidresponse.ie/pre-hospital-medical-emergency-training/
There has to be a better answer to this problem than "move on". Like I just said, I don't want to move on, I chose this career because I'm passionate about it. I love going to work every day. How many jobs out there allow you to show up, grab 200K plus of gear, then head out into the world and act with near complete autonomy besides going where the radio or CAD terminal tells you? Not many.
Are you passionate about it enough to take yourself to the next level? To move to where you can be what you want?
What's it going to take to change us from a vocation to a profession?
The evolution of US society in the exact opposite direction it is currently taking.