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Alright, maybe some people will flame me for this, maybe some people will appreciate the advice, but I'm going to drop an explanation of why I think it's a good idea for everyone to at least take the EMT-B class /and/ get some experience in it if they're planning to apply to med school. Now keep in mind, adcoms doesn't give too much of a **** anymore if you have an EMT cert but no experience. So there is no reason to get it for that.
That being said, you don't learn how to perform surgery as an EMT, but you do learn very basic emergency medicine, which honestly is a pretty good foundation for anything else. You learn a small amount of anatomy, medical terminology, basic medicine and interventions, and if you work as an EMT, then you get to experience patient care first hand and decide if that's for you. Granted, not all patient care will be like emergency medicine...EM is pretty damn stressful and the patients can be very ungrateful or even violent sometimes. Unless you work in Detroit or another very risky area though, it's not like you have a high chance of getting shot or hurt, so that's not really an issue. Granted, not all of you are going to want to go into EM, but regardless of what you want to do, adcoms is going to want to see that you have clinical exposure and volly exp. Well, you can both volunteer as an EMT or get paid for it, and regardless of which it is, that's about as good as it gets for patient care and clinical exposure.
Now granted there are plenty of jobs out there that pay better than EMT while you're going to college, but if you're going into medicine for money in the first place, then I hate to say it but you're wasting your time since you can make a ****load more in business or most other professions. Most of us who have had any sort of volly experience with a hospital before have probably figured out that, despite some very few exceptions, hospital experience is basically just a complete waste of time. Outside of EMT specifically, volunteering with a FD, search and rescue, etc. would be far more satisfying in my opinion and it'd accomplish the same thing as far as volly experience goes, since adcoms doesn't seem to particularly care which it is.
And hey, who knows, you might realize you like emergency medicine and stay in it...or at least decide earning money sleeping while going to college kicks ass. 😛
That being said, you don't learn how to perform surgery as an EMT, but you do learn very basic emergency medicine, which honestly is a pretty good foundation for anything else. You learn a small amount of anatomy, medical terminology, basic medicine and interventions, and if you work as an EMT, then you get to experience patient care first hand and decide if that's for you. Granted, not all patient care will be like emergency medicine...EM is pretty damn stressful and the patients can be very ungrateful or even violent sometimes. Unless you work in Detroit or another very risky area though, it's not like you have a high chance of getting shot or hurt, so that's not really an issue. Granted, not all of you are going to want to go into EM, but regardless of what you want to do, adcoms is going to want to see that you have clinical exposure and volly exp. Well, you can both volunteer as an EMT or get paid for it, and regardless of which it is, that's about as good as it gets for patient care and clinical exposure.
Now granted there are plenty of jobs out there that pay better than EMT while you're going to college, but if you're going into medicine for money in the first place, then I hate to say it but you're wasting your time since you can make a ****load more in business or most other professions. Most of us who have had any sort of volly experience with a hospital before have probably figured out that, despite some very few exceptions, hospital experience is basically just a complete waste of time. Outside of EMT specifically, volunteering with a FD, search and rescue, etc. would be far more satisfying in my opinion and it'd accomplish the same thing as far as volly experience goes, since adcoms doesn't seem to particularly care which it is.
And hey, who knows, you might realize you like emergency medicine and stay in it...or at least decide earning money sleeping while going to college kicks ass. 😛