fma08
Forum Asst. Chief
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I gotta disagree with that. Right now, a great many EMTs graduate completely incompetent in their skills. It's not that the skills are that difficult, or that the training is that inadequate. It's that the average person drawn to EMT school is an idiot in the first place. Improving competence would be more dependent upon improving the quality of students more than improving the quality of education.
As long as we are stuck with such a large percentage of nimrods, we really need to dumb it down more for them. Forget knowing why they are doing anything. They shouldn't be doing it for more than a few minutes anyhow. And learning about Battle Sign and Halo Sign contribute nothing to their ability to provide ABC care in the interim. They don't need to do a "thorough assessment". That's for the paramedic that should be arriving after them to do. There is nothing the EMT can do with the information acquired through such an assessment, so let's focus on providing what they are supposed to provide in the first place.
It's either a problem then of inadequate training or a lousy instructor. If the education base is upped, the "nimrods" will simply fail out then, as long as the instructor can realize that they aren't getting the material i.e. shouldn't be there. It's simple enough. If they can't learn the material in the first place. So why are there so many idiots and incompetent people passing? Because, they're either smart enough to get the curriculum in the first place, or it is tough enough, but the instructors are too lax in how they are judging the competency of skills during the testing. It's not that hard to memorize and say the few critical criteria on the test sheet and each box that has a point in it. They're incompetent because they don't know what it means. With enough training you could teach a monkey how to put on an NRB and crank the regulator to 15.