Originally posted by Luno@Jan 8 2005, 07:52 PM
 While my personal opinion when I heard this was the same as most of you, on further thought, I don't think it is as bad as most people think.  Here's why. 
In my opinion, EMT class only trains you to be field trainable.  Frankly, when I was on the rigs, I don't care if you show up like Ricky Rescue, with your own pulse oximeter on your belt, personalized BP cuff, and cardiologist Littman, you're still a rookie, and I can't even trust your BPs.  Frankly, I don't think that an EMT should be considered an EMT before your 1000th patient, and atleast a couple non-recoverable codes.  The majority of the learning is done in the field, we used to have a saying, "the lesson needed to be taught, thankfully nobody died."  EMT class has very little that is taught in a practical means, can you deliver a baby, yeah, mostly common sense, Epi, okay, there's a couple hour lecture, BP, more practice than a teaching point, O2, well, pretty self explainatory, AED, there's brain surgery, Bleeding control, hmmm, covered in First Aid, GSW/Stabbing, see bleeding control, Cardiac Emergencies... well, there's an hour lecture max, CVAs... looks like a carrot, acts like a carrot, it's a carrot, long bone stabilization, basic again, behavioral emergencies, sorry, either you understand or you don't, scene safety? that's subjective.  The tables, hmmm, you might need them for the test, and they're a good guideline in the field, but if the kid is blue, they probably have a depressed resp rate.  
As a certification goes, I think it's good, let's get more people interested in the field, and get them to where they will learn something.  That's just my opinion,
Luke