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Witam Serdecznie ! :)

Ostatnio zastanawiam się nad emigracją do USA.

I,mam oto takie pytanie.

czy może ktoś z was orientuje się czy jest honorowana szkoła pielęgniarska w Stanach ?

Czy jest szansa dostać po takiej szkole prace jako ratownik medyczny?

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Witam Serdecznie ! :)

Ostatnio zastanawiam się nad emigracją do USA.

Na jakiej podstawie? ktos cie sponsoruje? masz zielona karte, obywatelstwo?

czy może ktoś z was orientuje się czy jest honorowana szkoła pielęgniarska w Stanach ?

Czy jest szansa dostać po takiej szkole prace jako ratownik medyczny?

Jesli masz na mysli polska szkole pielegniarska to nie. Bedziesz musial zdobyc amerykanskie uprawnienia, w zaleznosci co dokladnie bedziesz chcial robic, mozliwe ze uda ci sie uniknc powtatrzania niektorych przedmiotow po ewaluacji dyplomu, wiele zalezy przepisow stanowych.

Certification level

EMS providers work under the authority and indirect supervision of a medical director or board-certified physician who oversees the policies and protocols of a particular EMS system or organization. Due to the nature of the environment in which EMS personnel must work, equipment and procedures are necessarily limited; however, prehospital personnel are able to provide a high level of advanced care.

EMS professionals are trained to follow a formal and carefully designed decision tree, more commonly referred to as a protocol, which has been approved by the Medical Control Physician. This protocol helps ensure a consistent approach to the most common types of emergencies the EMS professional may encounter.

The lines between one level of care and the next are becoming increasingly blurred. Skills that were once reserved for physicians are now routinely done by paramedics, and skills once reserved for paramedics, such as defibrillation, are now routinely done by Basic Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs). There is also wide state-to-state and even county-to-county variation of what types of care providers at different levels are allowed to provide. Finally, some states and counties alow for add-ons, such as defibrillation or IV therapy, which enable workers to learn and use additional skills without having to take all of the schooling to advance to the next level of certification. (Example: An EMT-Basic may not be able to start an IV, but by successfully completing an IV add-on course, she would then be able to do so.) That said:

Certified first responder (CFR): CFRs, many of whom are volunteers, render very basic first aid , including oxygen administration to patients. Generally, a CFR cannot assume care for a patient while that patient is being transported.

Emergency Medical Technician (EMT): EMT is used two different ways. Technically, an EMT is a person who has been certified (or licensed, in some states) to provide a stated level of care based on written protocols. EMTs may be divided into several groups, based on their level of certification:

EMT Basic (EMT-:(: Provides Basic Life Support (BLS) care, such as oxygen therapy, Splint (medicine), bleeding control, defibrillation with an AED, and light extrication (eg: removing a victim from a car, but not using the jaws of life.)

EMT Intermediate (EMT-I): not found in all states. EMT-Intermediates provide BLS care with the addition of IV therapy, and often intubation.

EMT Paramedic (see also Paramedics in the United States): EMT-paramedics provide all of the care provided by EMT Intermediates, plus manual defibrillation and advanced electrical therapy including transcutaneous pacing (fitting a temporary pacemaker to the patient's chest) and synchronized cardioversion (an advanced form of defibrillation), intubation, medication administration, pleural (chest) decompression, and more.

EMTs other than EMT-Bs often prefer to be identified based on their level of certification, so an EMT-P might be called a paramedic or an EMT-P, but rarely an EMT. EMT, when used alone, may therefor also mean EMT-B.

In addition to the Paramedic level, Critical Care Paramedics specialize in the management of critical trauma and medical patients during interfacility ground and aeromedical transports to include: ventilator management, IV pump infusion maintenance, aortic balloon pump monitoring, and specialized hemodynamic monitoring.

Ambulances in the United States are often staffed by at least two crewmembers. Many areas require that at least one crew member be a certified or licensed EMT, enabling this person to continue to provide medical care while the other crewmember drives the ambulance to transport the patient to the hospital.

In certain states other classifications exist, such as in New York, where there are 5 levels of EMS: CFR, EMT, AEMT-Intermediate, AEMT-Critical Care, and AEMT-Paramedic. Virginia has an EMT-Enhanced level as its entry-level ALS provider role, although this certification is not used in all local jurisdictions. Iowa has 5 EMT provider levels: First Responder, EMT-Basic, EMT-Intermediate, EMT-Paramedic and Paramedic Specialist. As there are other specializations of EMTs in certain states, some also do not recognize certain level either. Missouri is one of those states in which the EMT-I is not recognized as a level of the EMS system.

from wikipedia

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