Check again boyo. While it may vary a bit from hospital to hospital and state to state, the numbers are on the way up. As is the call for BSN instead of ASN's...hmmm....,last time I checked there were not 100 or so RN applicants per job.
Not entirely. Expecting employers to automatically increase the pay just because you hold a degree isn't completely realistic, though it's not completely wrong either. But expecting employers to increase your pay because you are able to provide them with more money because of your degree, that's a completely different ballgame.,Forcing an increase in education standards thinking employers will reward that education is naive to say the least.
I hate to compare the professions, but look at what happened with nurses, and to some extent is still happening with NP's. The educational requirements went up to a standard minimum level that met a definable educational level, an associates degree, and nurses (and administrators) were able to argue that since their job was complex enough to require that additional training, and prove it by mandating that everyone met it, that they should be able to get better reimbursements from medicare/medicaid, insurance comanies, charge more for their care in-hospital, etc. And you know what? It worked. And pay for nurses increased. You can look and most medical professions are doing the same thing; RT's, pharmacists, physical therapists, hell, even x-ray techs are doing it!
What makes people in EMS think we are so special that it wouldn't work for us? Other than pure stupidity?
Wait...I just answered my own question.