1. describe your responsibilities
2. how long did it take you to become a paramedic (or EMT)?
3. why did you choose to be a paramedic(or EMT)?
4. what type of personality traits are needed?
5. what are the biggest challenges you face on the job?
6. what is your opinion of the future of this career?
7. are there many opportunities availabe?
8. what advice can you offer me to become a paramedic also?
9. what are your likes and dislikes of the job?
10. what steps do i need to take to fullfill this career?
11. was it hard and stressfull in the beginning of your career?
1. My responsibilities as a Paramedic directing a team of healthcare providers on a scene of an emergency, to wellness checks, and providing the highest level of medical care to patients outside of the hospital setting. This care can range from starting an IV to give anywhere between 30-60+ medications, to emergent surgical techniques such as sticking a needle in someones chest or throat, to providing the same exact care someone would get from a doctor in the case of a medical cardiac arrest, to just holding someones hand and comforting them, and everything in between.
2. Took me one semester to get my EMT, and another year to get my Paramedic. From 'zero-to-hero', expect around 2 years, depending on your location.
3. Kind of fell in to it. Always wanted to be a cop, so I took an EMT class to look better on applications. One ride on an ambulance during EMT class and I was hooked. Haven't looked back since.
4. The one and only personality trait that is needed is compassion. Everything else comes with time.
5. It's a dangerous job. I've wrestled people high on PCP, I've been on scenes where someone was stabbed, and I've worked accidents on the side of a snowy highway while cars still zip by lanes away.
6. The future of this career shows a more clinician role than of a technician role. As time advances, more education will be required, and the people that are attracted to this job will shift a bit.
7. Yes, there are many opportunities available, depending on what you want to do. You can work for a private service, you can work for a slow rural service with long transport times, you can work for a busy urban service, you can work for the fire department, you can work for security contractors overseas in combat zones, you can work on oil rigs, you can work at amusement parts... the list goes on.
8. The advice I'd offer is take an EMT class, see if you like it. If you don't, oh well, it's just a single semester. However, if you DO like it, you'll be hooked. Just keep working on your education, learn what you can, and make your OWN decisions on how you'll practice your patient care.
9. Likes- Diverse days... never the same thing twice
The feeling of helping someone, be it saving a life (rare) or taking away their pain (not rare)
I get to play with flashy lights and sirens!
Dislikes- Pay.
Pay.
Pay.
You see the worst of mankind.
10. Go to school for your EMT, take the national certification exam, and see if you like it. If you do, continue right on to your Paramedic, get more education, and never stop learning.
11. It's hard and stressful at times, regardless of the fact that it's the beginning, middle, or end of your career. Dealing with humans is not an easy thing in any fashion... dealing with humans on one of their worst days is even harder. However, as stressful as it can be, it is infinitely more rewarding.