Firefighters average
$22.63 per hour or 46,840 per year.
Most firefighter training programs require applicants to be 18 years old with a high school
diploma; however, some programs prefer candidates who have earned an Associate
of Science in Fire Science.
Some Firefighters also
become EMTs and Paramedics.
EMTs usually
complete a course such as UCLA's EMT course that
is about 120-150 hours in length. Paramedic courses can be between 1,200
to 1,800 hours. EMT and paramedic courses consist of lectures, hands-on skills
training, and clinical and/or field internships. EMTs are educated in many
skills including CPR, giving patients oxygen, administering glucose for
diabetics, and helping others with treatments for asthma attacks or allergic
reactions. With very few exceptions, such as in the case of auto-injectors for
allergic reactions, EMTs are not allowed to provide treatments that requiring
breaking the skin: that means no needles.
Paramedics are
advanced providers of emergency medical care and are highly educated in topics
such as anatomy and physiology, cardiology, medications, and medical
procedures. They build on their EMT education and learn more skills such
as administering medications, starting intravenous lines, providing advanced
airway management for patients, and learning to resuscitate and support
patients with significant problems such as heart attacks and traumas. Paramedic
education programs (such as UCLA's
Paramedic Program) may
last six to twelve months.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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