V
vr
Guest
I'll wade in with my own frustrations.
The Reserve side of the CFHSG is concentrating on increasing it's numbers of civilian trained personnel, Drs, RNs, EMAs, et al. They are doing this by no longer recruiting (? for time being) non-civilian qualified personnel. My unit's stream of new recruits has practically dried up while the 20% attrition continues unabated.
We non civvy qualified 737-M's are very limited in what we are allowed to do. As far as going overseas in our trade, forget it. There are still openings as amb drivers but those are few and far between. The LFWA guidelines for medical coverage basically state that anything not requiring a paramedic can be covered by a SFA qual troop. So another opportunity to gain employment and support our fellow soldiers is gone. It is very frustrating to some of us older troops that the only time we can get on taskings is to drive Cpls around.
The reserve-trained Med-A is the backbone of the Reserve units. These are the people who attend the exercises, parades and do all the sh#tty little jobs that make units go. It is my personal experience that due to the nature of their employment civvy medical personnel are irregular paraders. The most dedicated and hard-working members of Reserve units are being marginalized and they know it.
Apparently this whole PHTLS thing came about as a result of Reserve CO's pressing for it at OP-Med. It was news to my CO. PHTLS has absolutely no footprint in this province. None. It's not taught or practiced anywhere whereas with BTLS we have access to the resources or our paramedic schools. It is going to be a royal pain (expensive!!!!) to train instructors, train and retrain the troops.
My real question is what is the advantage of PHTLS over BTLS? Will we have to keep doing SFA/AMFR-2/PHTLS/BTLS over and over again? We are saving lots of money on FOA out of this though. :dontpanic:
The Reserve side of the CFHSG is concentrating on increasing it's numbers of civilian trained personnel, Drs, RNs, EMAs, et al. They are doing this by no longer recruiting (? for time being) non-civilian qualified personnel. My unit's stream of new recruits has practically dried up while the 20% attrition continues unabated.
We non civvy qualified 737-M's are very limited in what we are allowed to do. As far as going overseas in our trade, forget it. There are still openings as amb drivers but those are few and far between. The LFWA guidelines for medical coverage basically state that anything not requiring a paramedic can be covered by a SFA qual troop. So another opportunity to gain employment and support our fellow soldiers is gone. It is very frustrating to some of us older troops that the only time we can get on taskings is to drive Cpls around.
The reserve-trained Med-A is the backbone of the Reserve units. These are the people who attend the exercises, parades and do all the sh#tty little jobs that make units go. It is my personal experience that due to the nature of their employment civvy medical personnel are irregular paraders. The most dedicated and hard-working members of Reserve units are being marginalized and they know it.
Apparently this whole PHTLS thing came about as a result of Reserve CO's pressing for it at OP-Med. It was news to my CO. PHTLS has absolutely no footprint in this province. None. It's not taught or practiced anywhere whereas with BTLS we have access to the resources or our paramedic schools. It is going to be a royal pain (expensive!!!!) to train instructors, train and retrain the troops.
My real question is what is the advantage of PHTLS over BTLS? Will we have to keep doing SFA/AMFR-2/PHTLS/BTLS over and over again? We are saving lots of money on FOA out of this though. :dontpanic: