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uncle_salty

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Posts posted by uncle_salty

  1. I call it my ambulance and my cot and my scene and my patient because I take personal responsibility for all of the above. Personal responsibility is a good thing, and it is encouraged by true professionals. Before you go throwing names around, you should know what you are talking about. Your first paragraph indicated that you did know what you were talking about. Then you went and blew a great deal of your credibility with a petty snap judgement.

    Nice ending statement though! :|

    Since it's your ambulace, why don't you take personal responsibility in getting out there and cleaning it. A couple extra semesters of part time night classes never glossed over an overblown sense of superiority.

    You are the basic. The paramedic is the basic with advanced skills. Both of you are emergency medical technicians. Got it? Basics often receive better treatment from non-ems providers than their own. It's a real shame. There are paramedics who decry the basic's education. These same paramedics precept basic students regularly. They have a chance to be the best mentor they can be. So they piss that opportunity away, being evasive and creating intimidating atmospheres by exploiting the clinical student as their housekeeper. Then run to places like emtcity to spit more venom at the basics. You can't complain about the problem when you're either a big part of it, or take a idle approach torwards fixing it when given a real chance to make a measureable difference.

  2. The answer is you can't .....here you goUncle_Salty..! How does it feels to be compared to a pedicurist and that they require longer length school than an EMT ? And their average salary is more than the average EMT!... Kinda knocks the wind out huh?.... Just think the people that cut your toenails and fingernails requires more hours in education...!

    Pedicurist: Career Education Profile

    Pedicurists are specialized cosmetology professionals. They primarily work with a client's toe nails, shaping and cleaning them. Read this article for further details about what a pedicurist does.

    What is a Pedicurist?

    A pedicurist, also known as a nail technician, specializes in cleaning, shaping, and painting clients' nails, specifically toe nails. Pedicurists may add acrylic nails to a client's natural nails to give it length or to make it easier to style. Most pedicurists work in nail salons, hotel spas, or other all-day spa facilities.

    Education Overview for a Pedicurist:

    According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, www.bls.gov, the training for manicurists and pedicurists takes significantly less time than the training for barbers and cosmetologists.(Approxinately 300 clock hours) In order to become a licensed pedicurist, students must complete a cosmetology program. These programs are available at community colleges, technical schools, and cosmetology schools. Most students enroll in a manicure program and take courses that are specifically related to pedicures.

    Occupational Information for Pedicurists:

    In the upcoming years, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that there should be continued growth in the number of nail salons and full-service days, which will increase the number of available jobs for manicurists and pedicurists.

    Salary Information for Pedicurists:

    In 2004, the median salary for manicurists and pedicurists was $18,500, as reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    R/r 911

    I bet you've just been WAITING to unleash that little gem, haven't you?

    We could look at in terms of semesters. In consideration of the two and six month paramedic programs spreading like wildfire I guess I could become a paramedic quicker than a pedicurist. Or a medical records transcriptionist. Or an administrative secretary. Or maybe we could consider quality of education. So I guess one day when a loved one of yours needs resuscitation in a remote cotton patch in nowhere, texas where ALS is inconceivable, you can send for the nail technicians.

  3. Oh dusty just likes to go the extremes of both levels of training. By his indication all basics are first-aid providers fresh out of a two-weeker, all the while he and his ultra-hip paramedic friends have attended years of advanced scientific didactic lecture at the university level. So understand this: The real truth is that the gap isn't quite as wide as he may lead you to believe. The vast majority of basic programs in the U.S. well exceed the minimum DOT requirements. Most basic courses are 5-month (one semester) programs in which classes are attended 2-4 days a week usually in a community college setting. Add a couple or so semsters of mostly skills/meds training and maybe a A&P class and you've got the typical paramedic. There are exceptions to the rule on both ends of EMS, therein lies the two-week EMT bootcamp - but not without consideration of Illinois' brand spankin' new two-month paramedic course, so do not be deceived into believing the excepetions have become the rule. His apprecation of the cost is spot on, and the reason the basic classes stay full is because that is foundation of all paramedicine in this country, being a mandatory prerequisite to more advanced programs.

    Now that the playing field is just a little more level, discuss.

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