Paramedic PRN
Listed on 2026-07-13
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Healthcare
Emergency Services / EMS
POSITION SUMMARY
PRN Paramedic delivers high-quality emergency medical care in pre-hospital settings as part of a public emergency response team. This role involves responding to 911 calls, providing advanced life support (ALS), and ensuring safe and efficient patient transport. Paramedics work under medical direction and in coordination with fire, law enforcement, and hospital personnel.
ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS (required)- Attends seminars and training sessions;
- Performs departmental inventory control;
- Educate self and staff on county geography, streets, roads and buildings.
- Performs other duties as deemed necessary or assigned.
WORKING CONDITIONS AND PHYSICAL REQUIREMENTS
The work environment and physical demand characteristics described here is representative and not intended to be fully inclusive of those an employee encounters while performing the essential functions of this job. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions.
The work is often performed while wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and could be performed while carrying additional equipment. The work is typically performed in an office, outdoors, and at the scenes of emergency events. Employee may be exposed to fire, smoke, noise, dirt, dust, grease, machinery with moving parts, contagious or infectious diseases or pathogens, irritating chemicals and weather extremes.
PPE items include goggles, masks, gloves, and all other protective clothing required for EMS operations.
- Environment: Paramedics work in a variety of settings including ambulances, accident scenes, homes, streets, and healthcare facilities. Conditions can range from clean and climate-controlled to hazardous and unpredictable (e.g., outdoor accidents, crime scenes, industrial sites).
- Schedule: Frequently includes long shifts (12, 24, or 48 hours), irregular hours, overnights, weekends, and holidays. Paramedics must be on-call and ready to respond at all times during their shift.
- Pace: Fast-paced, high-stress work with frequent exposure to life-and-death situations.
- Exposure Risks: Regular exposure to blood borne pathogens, communicable diseases, bodily fluids, chemicals, and physically dangerous situations such as fires or violent incidents.
- Emotional Stress: High emotional demands due to patient trauma, death, and interactions with distressed family members or the public.
- Strength & Endurance: Must be able to lift and carry patients and heavy equipment (often 100+ lbs) under challenging conditions.
- Mobility: Frequent bending, kneeling, crouching, climbing, and standing for long periods. Must be able to move quickly and efficiently in confined or awkward spaces.
- Stamina: Ability to perform strenuous physical tasks for extended periods without fatigue.
- Manual Dexterity: Fine motor skills for tasks like IV insertion, airway management, and operating medical devices.
- Vision & Hearing: Good visual and auditory acuity, including color vision and the ability to hear alarms, radio communications, and patient cues.
- Mental Focus: Ability to stay focused and make quick, accurate decisions under pressure.
KNOWLEDGE, SKILL AND ABILITY
- Thorough knowledge of emergency medical techniques, anatomy, pharmacology, and…
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