Fourteen graduate from EMT-Paramedic training at VGCC


Seated, from left: EMT-Paramedic graduates Harvey Grim, Herbert Hill Davis, Courtney Moss, Cassidy Ivey, Catherine Garner and Fuller Caton; standing, from left: EMS coordinator Stephen Barney, graduates Tyler McDaniel, Jonathan Kraemer, Joseph Farlow, David Drumheller, Michael Hunter Robbins, James Hughes and William Jenkins, administrative assistant Kim Jackson and instructor Vivian Loyd. Not pictured: graduate C.J. Phillips. (VGCC photo)

Seated, from left: EMT-Paramedic graduates Harvey Grim, Herbert Hill Davis, Courtney Moss, Cassidy Ivey, Catherine Garner and Fuller Caton; standing, from left: EMS coordinator Stephen Barney, graduates Tyler McDaniel, Jonathan Kraemer, Joseph Farlow, David Drumheller, Michael Hunter Robbins, James Hughes and William Jenkins, administrative assistant Kim Jackson and instructor Vivian Loyd. Not pictured: graduate C.J. Phillips. (VGCC photo)

Vance-Granville Community College honored 11 men and three women who completed the college’s year-long Emergency Medical Technician-Paramedic program on July 13.

The graduates included Michael Hunter Robbins of Bunn; Catherine Garner of Creedmoor; Fuller Caton, Herbert Hill Davis, James Hughes, Cassidy Ivey, William Jenkins, Tyler McDaniel and Courtney Moss, all of Henderson; David Drumheller of Mebane; Jonathan Kraemer of Raleigh; Harvey Grim of Roxboro; Joseph Farlow of Timberlake; and C.J. Phillips of Youngsville.

Vivian Loyd, a Registered Nurse and Paramedic Level II instructor, was the instructor for the class.

EMT-Paramedic instruction includes 596 hours of didactic (classroom) training and 500 hours of clinical education, or field internship. To be eligible to take the EMT-P course, students had to have already completed a 203-hour EMT-Basic course and passed a state exam.

An EMT-Paramedic has enhanced skills beyond the EMT-Basic level, including being able to administer additional interventions and medications. The EMT-P delivers the highest level of pre-hospital medical care in North Carolina.

In order to successfully complete the EMT-P course, students had to pass several different exams, including a “scope of practice” exam. This scenario-based evaluation tested the hands-on and critical thinking skills of students, as they delivered the appropriate treatment to multiple trauma patients and dealt with pediatric, environmental, and mental-illness situations. Each student also had to complete an 80-hour Anatomy and Physiology course.

Now that students have completed the EMT-P course, they must take the 100-question North Carolina Office of Emergency Medical Services credentialing exam to become state-certified.

VGCC offers Emergency Medical Services training from the basic to the Paramedic level, in addition to continuing education. For more information on enrolling in these courses, call Stephen Barney at (252) 738-3273.