Paramedicine · Illinois
Paramedicine colleges in Illinois
Paramedicine program coverage in Illinois is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Paramedicine trains students to deliver advanced emergency medical care outside the hospital, suiting people who stay calm in crises and want hands-on prehospital work.
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What you'll study in a Paramedicine program
- Human anatomy, physiology, and pathophysiology for emergency care
- Pharmacology and supervised medication administration
- Advanced airway management, ventilation, and oxygen delivery
- Cardiac monitoring, ECG rhythm interpretation, and defibrillation
- Trauma assessment, hemorrhage control, splinting, and spinal immobilization
- Patient assessment and field diagnosis across medical and traumatic emergencies
- Multi-casualty triage, scene safety, and crisis-scene management
- Rescue, extrication, and ambulance equipment operation and maintenance
- Patient documentation, radio communication, and EMS protocols
Where a Paramedicine degree can lead
- Paramedic
- Critical Care Paramedic
- Flight Paramedic
- Community Paramedic
- EMS Supervisor
- Emergency Department Technician
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 paramedics median $58,410).
Paramedicine prepares students to assess and treat patients during medical emergencies before they reach a hospital, working under physician oversight at the advanced end of prehospital care. Coursework builds on a foundation of anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology, and pharmacology, then layers on the procedures that define the role: airway management, cardiac monitoring and rhythm interpretation, administering medications, controlling bleeding, immobilizing trauma, and forming a preliminary field assessment of injuries and illnesses. Students also drill scene management, patient triage when several people are hurt at once, rescue and extrication, radio and reporting communication, and the upkeep of ambulance equipment. Unlike emergency-medical-technician training, which stops at basic and intermediate skills, paramedicine carries students through advanced interventions and the clinical reasoning to decide when to use them; unlike nursing or a physician-assistant path, the focus stays on stabilizing people in uncontrolled, time-pressured settings rather than ongoing bedside or clinic care.
Paramedicine is usually earned as a postsecondary certificate or an associate degree, and the credential blends classroom science with skills labs, supervised clinical rotations in hospital departments such as the emergency room and operating room, and a field internship riding with an ambulance crew. Becoming a working paramedic generally requires passing a national certification exam and holding a state license or certification, and many employers expect current cardiac and trauma life-support cards; programmatic accreditation and the exact licensing rules vary by state and should be verified locally. Graduates work on ground ambulances and fire-based emergency medical services, in air-medical and critical-care transport, in hospital emergency departments, and in community paramedicine programs that bring care to patients at home.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of paramedics, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $58,410 and projects employment to grow about 5% from 2024 to 2034; a postsecondary nondegree award is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
Paramedicine in other states
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