Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Or university pre-medical school science courses + medic mill?
Why not do the premed courses and then the degree program? The premed courses would take care of the non-EMS part of the degree for the most part and you'd wind up with a more respectable (and hireable) background.
"Big jobs usually go to the men who prove their ability to outgrow small
ones."
theres idiots that graduate from harvard and theres geniuses that stop at community college... where you go doestn really dictate what you'll learn.
theres idiots that graduate from harvard and theres geniuses that stop at community college... where you go doestn really dictate what you'll learn.
It can and does for most people. You're assuming that you're dealing with folks who want to actually learn. That's not the niche market diploma mills cater towards at all.
That is so not correct. For many people, they just want to learn a trade/skill and go to work. This does not imply they are lazy or looking for shortcuts. Perhaps they know what they want to do and the "Medic Mill" is a path to their goal. Like I said earlier, a persons progression in a career will be based on what effort that person puts into bettering themselves in said profession.
Why not do the premed courses and then the degree program? The premed courses would take care of the non-EMS part of the degree for the most part and you'd wind up with a more respectable (and hireable) background.
....and you so missed the point that we're not talking about a "trade", we're talking about something that should be treated like a profession and has some definite needs for background education first. You have too much faith in your fellow man's willingness to work hard. People are by and large lazy, stupid and will take the path of least resistance to their goal. That would tend to mean that if you allow folks to run through a very basic program they are going to come out with and remain in possession of very basic skills which will degrade over time.
I will be graduating with a bachelor's in in another field, and the community college program here does not seem to offer much more than the hospital-based program (which is a year long so maybe is not quite a mill?)
working hard or not has nothing to do with what paramedic school you go to, money often does.
i know plenty of army medics who went to "medic mills"
I don't know where you are at but in the several states I've lived and worked in, most of the programs OVER $5K are mills.when there are several programs that are below the $5k range
more than someone who's worked above a paramedics scope of practice for years and spent their time studying the few parts of paramedic that they didnt alreavy have down?
you could even argue that paramedics that go to the places with "substandard" training and actually become paramedics are better informed, since if they training is that bad then they would have to bust their *** to teach themselves.
unless they're allowing paramedics to do chest tubes, other surgical procedures, and issue almost any medication thats not a controlled substance these days?
also i dont remember seeing any flight RT's or even anyone from the air force cited in the TC3 manual...
have an actual source saying that paramedics that graduate from certain programs struggle in the field or is it simply a bias?
never said it was done in combat conditions although many of our guys did pack the gear for them for extended missions where medivacs would be a problem. many of our PBs were 100% medic ran as far as medical capabilities went though.Since when has your average medic (not counting the guys on the military medical helicopters) been packing the gear to do a chest tube?
chest tubes are lightly touched during 68W ait (atleast when i went through they were). nothing fancy just "heres what they are, heres when you use it, heres how you put it in"... bout an hour and a half of instruction max. whether or not its actually taught during ait still or not doesnt really matter. if a medic is taught it at unit level then its in his scope of practice, how does that negate my argument at all?Let's see some documentation that says it's a standard procedure because I've not seen any (although I will freely admit that I haven't actively looked in the past year or two). Last time I heard anything about it, it was still left at a unit by unit basis at the discretion of the senior medical person present (PA or MD) and the unit commander. Even then, they still had to go through advanced training beyond the 68W basic course and that negates your argument.
yes i am aware that a lot of the references are not from army personel... a lot are navy personel. actually looking over the tc3 guideline it does a pretty good job of listing atleast the basic occupation (probably for the sake of credibility) and military status (including retired)You do know that citations don't list occupation normally and when I wrote it, I was no longer with the USAF. You'd probably be amazed at how many of those references were written by someone other than an Army member.
if the majority of graduates from medic mills really were that bad, i'm sure on application forms for the different paramedic companies it would have something along the lines of "graduates from ____ need not apply." i've yet to see that thoughLike most things in EMS, there is little in the way of published data, but from the data I had access to as a quality control officer and clinical preceptor there was a distinct performance advantage for those who did not come out of the two local medic mills. Our medical director (who was trained as a medic during VN by the US Army) was very interested in how the local hospital program he oversaw (which was longer than the local community college program BTW) stacked up against the other local EMS training entities.
a lot of people in the military list their home state as their residencyBTW, what's a medic with the 82nd doing way out in Cali?