SA国际传媒

SA国际传媒

11 keys to success for the rookie EMT

Breaking down some light-hearted and professionally-serious tips to start and build a successful career in EMS

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Entering this profession 鈥 at any age, pay structure, experience level 鈥 can be intimidating ... but also welcoming at the same time.

Photo/Wikimedia Commons

Editor鈥檚 note: The cost of replacing a medic, both financially and in time invested, is steep. Finding and hiring promising candidates is only one piece of the staffing puzzle. In an SA国际传媒 Special Coverage Series, 鈥淵ear One: Creating a career path for new EMTs,鈥 learn how to onboard team members to set them up for long-term success, through the first 90 days, the first 6 months and beyond.


鈥淲elcome to the study of paramedicine and the industry of EMS!鈥

Has anyone ever told you that as a rookie EMS provider?

Or, have you simply been told to 鈥渒eep your ears open and your mouth shut?鈥

Entering this profession 鈥 at any age, pay structure, experience level 鈥 can be intimidating ... but also welcoming at the same time. As a new technician, clinician, employee, lifelong learner, etc., the goal of everyone truly invested in this study and industry is to keep you engaged, invested and around! So, what has the past nearly 20 years of my experience taught me 鈥 what can I share with you 鈥 to help you build (and maintain) a successful career in EMS? [Fill out the form on this page to download a printable guide to success for new EMTs.]

For starters, success looks differently for everyone. For some, it means starting your career with one agency and ending (with retirement) at that same agency decades later. For others 鈥 and I鈥檒l use myself as a prime example 鈥 it means learning, growing, failing, building resilience and pushing forward (sometimes multiple times) but nevertheless, remaining invested. Just like the stock market, if you don鈥檛 invest in it, you certainly can鈥檛 win with it!

In no particular order of importance or level of seriousness, here鈥檚 a few keys to success for those of you entering into the EMS profession (or for those of you continuing to find your way).

1. Carry a pen, shears and flashlight


This is just life tip No. 1, or EMS tip No. 1: always have a pen, trauma shears and a flashlight of some sort available on you for every call. Pens may not work on your tablet, but you鈥檒l be surprised how often you鈥檒l still need this antiquated piece of writing equipment in the field. Trauma shears are also a must. Murphy鈥檚 Law will tell you that you鈥檒l never be able to find the black-handled shears in the bottom of your black-lined bag, so simply carry a pair on you and you鈥檒l avoid having to blindly (frantically) search for them when you need a pair now. Lastly, a flashlight 鈥 even an itty-bitty keychain one that you picked up at an EMS conference 鈥 can shed a lot of light when you鈥檙e surrounded by darkness.

2. Learn where everything is


Red bag, blue bag, green bag, no bag (sounds like a Dr. Seuss rhyme)! Even if you don鈥檛 know what it is, learn where to find it within your ambulance and multiple bags.

3. Learn where you鈥檙e going


You don鈥檛 necessarily need to become as proficient as Google Maps on day one, but at the very least, do some daily studying to know where your hospitals are and which major roadways will get you there.

4. Know your equipment鈥檚 operations


Especially your stair chair and cot (stretcher, or pram 鈥 which I still refuse to call this device): know the proper ins-and-outs for how to utilize and troubleshoot these devices. What if a wheel seems locked, or your battery goes dead? Know how to operate these devices so proficiently that you can seamlessly operate them even in trouble mode.

5. Know (and learn) what you don鈥檛 know


Respect that you only have upwards of 200 hours of training as an EMT and that you鈥檙e at the beginning of your paramedicine study journey. Be confident in what you do know, while also respecting what you don鈥檛.

6. Never settle for the minimum


Whether it鈥檚 the standard of care, patient compassion, continued educations hours, or anything else that you encounter, never settle for the minimum. This doesn鈥檛 mean that every patient you care for needs IV access or lights and siren transport ... that鈥檚 not the point here. Always be looking to do one step better (which doesn鈥檛 always equate to one thing more).

7. Remain ambitious


Keep your passion alive and continue with your 鈥渂etter鈥 philosophy. This, as a reminder, is a personal goal and benchmark, not something that you should compare yourself to others on. Don鈥檛 strive to be better than someone else; rather, remain ambitious to do better than before.

8. Keep your head up (high)


When you do something right, well or even great, keep your head up high. Equally so, keep your head up high when you don鈥檛 necessarily succeed 鈥 when you miss that IV attempt, get buried with the wrong differential diagnosis or even make a simple mistake. Be cautious, however, not to allow positivity to turn into arrogance. Be humble; not heroic.

9. Enjoy your time


If you don鈥檛 enjoy coming to work each day, then don鈥檛! Either find a way to embrace enjoyment in your job, or find someplace else where you can enjoy your time. Your happiness is not within your boss鈥檚 control ... this is on you!

Having said that, this doesn鈥檛 mean that you need to settle or force yourself into a positive attitude when working in bad environments or with incompatible partners. You deserve to enjoy your job ... so if there鈥檚 a factor existing in the way of that enjoyment, reach out to mitigate that factor or remove yourself from the situation. Yes, it鈥檚 easier said than done, but you have the most control (and awareness) over your direct surroundings, so if you don鈥檛 like the surroundings, then do something about it (speak up, move out, etc.).

10. Seek out a mentor


Surround yourself with others who are invested, too. Mentors can be internal or external 鈥 they don鈥檛 need to be within your EMS agency. Need a mentor? Look around, find positive sources online or at conferences. Heck, find me on ... I鈥檓 glad to chat!

11. Focus on safety


You may only have one shot at safety, so if you embrace, prepare for and practice it every day, you鈥檙e more likely to remain safe in what you do. Reduce the risk of errors occurring around you, remain appropriately visible and always size-up your scene before you enter it. This doesn鈥檛 necessarily equate to paranoia, but it does equate to preparedness.


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Find a mentor, start with what鈥檚 important and train like you fight to accelerate your EMS training and become an expert


Fill out the form on this page to download a printable guide to success for new EMTs.

Tim is the founder and CEO of Emergency Medical Solutions, LLC, an EMS training and consulting company that he developed in 2010. He has nearly two decades of experience in the emergency services industry, having worked as a career firefighter, paramedic and critical care paramedic in a variety of urban, suburban, rural and in-hospital environments. His background includes nearly a decade of company officer and chief officer level experience, in addition to training content delivery and program development spanning his entire career. He is experienced in EMS operations, community paramedicine, quality assurance, data management, training, special operations and administration disciplines, and holds credentials as both a supervising and managing paramedic officer.

Tim also has active experience as a columnist and content developer with over 200 published works and over 100 hours of education content available online, and is a social media influencer on LinkedIn within the EMS industry. Connect with him on LinkedIn or at tnowak@emergencymedicalsolutionsllc.com.
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