I am shocked at your statements that EMT's have, "Absence of responsibility and decision making," AND do not have patient care as a goal.
Why is this statement shocking to you?
Do you have a license or a certification? Can you practice without the authority of a medical control physician? Is that physician not ultimately responsible for the care you provide? Does that physician not exclusively determine what you can or cannot do? If your protocol dictates you must perform a specific intervention and you follow such, if harm comes to the patient from it are you held accountable or your physician medical director?
(i'll admit somebody might try to make you the scapegoat, but your defense is still going to be "I was following protocol.")
If you actually had patient care as the goal, EMTs and infact all of EMS would be demanding that educational standards meet the demands of today's medicine. As of this moment, the opposite is true.
If you actually had patient care as the goal there would be a demand of the rank and file to abandon harmful and useless practices and institute interventions that are beneficial in today's world.
Let's not pretend we are anywhere near that.
The EMT has 2 endpoints to patient care and both of them revolve around passing that patient off. Either to ALS or to a hospital.
What you tell girls or guys at parties is your business.
But the fact is anyone who can do compressions and follow the instructions on an AED can provide the scientifically proven life saving care EMT-Bs do.
I would expect a professional minded patient centered care provider would know every in and out of the values and limitations of their scope of practice and its interventions, am I wrong?
Gee, what IS their goal then? Wow, you have got to be kidding. Ever consider SAR EMT's? Or Wilderness EMT's or lifeguards? maybe you're thinking of your transport only basics but there are basic's providing patient care in backcountry and extreme wilderness making limb and life decisions
These environments and the specificities of them are not related to the EMT-B curriculum or scope.
The operational aspects and training are seperate from EMT-Bs. That is no different from firefighter/emt-bs, hazmat emt-bs, industrial medicine emt-bs, er techs with an emt-b cert and a list that goes on even outside of the austere environment.
many paramedics will never be exposed to in their clean rigs. Trust me, I respect the knowledge and additional training of the medic, but not their ego trips.
So what?
I don't have figures, but if I was a betting man, I would definately wager there are more paramedics functioning in austere environments specifically for their paramedic cert (aka medical cert) than EMT-Bs specifically for their EMT cert and not another specific knowledge or skill and being an EMT is just a bonus.
I dont really disagree with this statement, however it really isnt the EMTs fault. Most people when they go to school to be an EMT, assume they are taking on a lot of responsibility, that the school will be difficult and have high standards and that their decision making ability is crucial and will be put to the test.
The issue isn't about assigning blame. It doesn't matter who is to blame, it only matters the problem is fixed.
However, we must acknowledge the problem isn't being fixed because of special interests that would lose considerably if the system was changed who constantly fight to keep things the same.
There seems to be this notion that people who dont immediately go to Paramedic school are somehow stupid, or lazy, or just want the minimum standards, yet MOST paramedics didnt go right from EMT school to Paramedic school. Most worked as EMTs, sometimes for years, and many of them(the honest ones) will say that working as an EMT made Paramedic school less stressful and working as a brand new Paramedic less difficult..
I worked as an EMT for years and largely slept through medic school. I never suggested they were lazy, stupid, or otherwise.
I was even forced to become an EMT, were I not forced, I would not have gone to EMT school.
But I would relate that it was a different time. We knew less than we do now and back in the day, paramedics were so rare that an EMT was likely to be the only prehospital medical provider. But the decisions that were made were operational. Every patient got one of the same handful of treatmentswe had no matter what.
It is not that EMTs were never valuable, the world evolves, but EMTs are not evolving with it and they are making themselves obsolete by not demanding their vocation advance. They do not choose this on the individual level, they choose it at the organizational level.
The ones who say EMT experience makes no difference in Paramedic school are simply wrong. The pass rate for students with EMT experience is significantly higher than it is for those with no experience, and Ive personally seen those medics who did pass with no experience struggily mightily as brand new Paramedics, versus the ones with EMT experience who had a far smoother transition.
I am not always right. But I say with the job opportunities available to EMTs today, they may have a chance to gain experience that will be beneficial, but not only is it not guaranteed, they have a far better chance of having experience that actually harms them when in paramedic school.
I refute your assertion EMTs with experience have the highest pass rates in paramedic school. In my nearly 10 years of teaching EMS at multiple organizations, in the 2 organizations that kept records on the demographics of pass/fail, experienced EMTs were the group that failed the most. The group that not only passed but had the best grades were those with prior or concurrent university education.
In my observation, the reason experienced EMTs struggle with medic school is because 1. they think they know things they don't. 2. They have been taught incorrect information in the field. 3. As adult learners they are resistant to changing preconceived notions and most always never reconcile this. I have seen it so much that I can tell you if they are going to pass or fail usually within a couple of weeks with them. Now and again I am wrong about one of them, but not often.
Yes, new people struggle, whether it is a new nurse, new paramedic, or new doctor. However, the ones with more knowledge will often become more proficent providers faster because they gain more insight from every experience.
If you want to see for yourself, observe a new EMT with only EMT training. Compare this to observations of new EMTs with prior basic science or other healthcare education.