- Joined
- Oct 27, 2004
- Messages
- 4,357
- Reaction score
- 3,172
- Points
- 5,716
- Age
- 40
- Attending Physician
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Is it helpful? Sure.
Is it helpful as much as most people on here are making it out to be? No! In fact, let's go back to the admissions counselor's view on this:
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showpost.php?p=8647135&postcount=32
I'd definitely argue that it isn't valuable because of the psychomotor skills that are learned, which was what made up the vast, vast, vast majority of your post. Either that, or I'm mistaking your post for someone elses. Your post was the one that talked about pushing medications, writing reports, delivering babies, and intubating (oh my!), correct? Nothing about working with a team. Nothing about working with special patient populations. Nope, those aren't important (at least not important enough to list), what's important was that you got to intubate someone (which unless you go into anesthesiology or emergency medicine is unimportant anyways).
When I talked about my EMS experience during my interviews, I didn't mention taking blood pressures, starting patients on oxygen, or anything of the like. I talked about nursing homes, special patient populations (especially dealing with psychiatric patients), interacting with other patient care providers like physicians, nurses, and respiratory therapists. I doubt any of my interviewers cared that I've done CPR before.
Is it helpful as much as most people on here are making it out to be? No! In fact, let's go back to the admissions counselor's view on this:
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showpost.php?p=8647135&postcount=32
I'd definitely argue that it isn't valuable because of the psychomotor skills that are learned, which was what made up the vast, vast, vast majority of your post. Either that, or I'm mistaking your post for someone elses. Your post was the one that talked about pushing medications, writing reports, delivering babies, and intubating (oh my!), correct? Nothing about working with a team. Nothing about working with special patient populations. Nope, those aren't important (at least not important enough to list), what's important was that you got to intubate someone (which unless you go into anesthesiology or emergency medicine is unimportant anyways).
When I talked about my EMS experience during my interviews, I didn't mention taking blood pressures, starting patients on oxygen, or anything of the like. I talked about nursing homes, special patient populations (especially dealing with psychiatric patients), interacting with other patient care providers like physicians, nurses, and respiratory therapists. I doubt any of my interviewers cared that I've done CPR before.

