You also complained about being with a nurse in the ED.
And if we're talking about a limit time to learn how to make clinical judgement, than I stand by my argument that physicians are a better match.
Not all nurses are as stupid as you make them out to be in your post. I could also list many incidents where EMTs and Paramedics have screwed up on the pulse oximeter. Just read some of the discussions on this forum and you will see those in EMS are not perfect either.
...and not all EMTs and paramedics are stupid either. However I see a lot more documentation issues when I look through nursing documentation than EMS documentation.
This constant bashing of other health care professionals is what keeps some EMT and Paramedic students out of many clinical situations. No one wants you in their area if you already have formed an opinion based on some anonymous internet forum that you are better than anyone else and haven't even got a good start in your Paramedic program.
1. I'm not in a paramedic program.
2. If you want some interprofessional bashing, have you tried looking in the mirror?
3. My chain of command doesn't involve nurses anyways.
Some of the responsibility should also fall on the instructors of the Paramedic programs also.
Completely agree.
What exactly is a Paramedic going to learn in PACU? It is very rare they have a code and Paramedics need to know how to keep an ETT in and how to not pull them out.
You were the one who mentioned oxygen administration devices, not me, and I've seen more variety on ways to deliver oxygrn there than on the floors where often my team wouldnt have any patients on supplemental oxygen. Also, unless the patient was going to the ICU, they were extubated in the OR anyways.
The patients on med surg would more likely be the type of patients an EMT or Paramedic would most likely see. Not everyone is a trauma and not everyone is just a band aid in the ER. These are the patients who need to be transported and will get admitted for medical illnesses either acute or chronic exacerbations.
Why should a beginning Paramedic student jump right into an ICU and see equipment that most have never even read about and will probably never see in the field? Why not learn patient assessment over and over again? Med Surg floors in major hospitals have hundreds of patients. It seems some just want to dive right into the neat skills part and miss a lot of stuff at the beginning and inbetween.
because it makes more sense than med surge due to the acuity of the patients. However, for assessment and management, the ED is the best place for them.
Also on med surg you can learn to talk to the patients. Of course you might also have to talk to the nurses which might be difficult for some like yourself.
I always love your personal attacks. It warms my heart and tells me that I'm right.
Of course taking to patients can also be achieved in the ED.