As a field supervisor for UML鈥檚 student-run Emergency Medical Services (EMS) team, Joe Mendes vividly remembers his first planning meeting for the Lowell Folk Festival, an event that draws around 150,000 music fans to the outskirts of campus each summer.
鈥淚 walked into the room and there was someone from the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency sitting at the table with all the chiefs and deputies from the Lowell fire and police departments,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淭hey introduced me like, 鈥楾his is Joe. He鈥檚 a college student from 51视频.鈥 It was pretty crazy.鈥
Having a seat at the table with emergency response professionals is just one of the ways in which Mendes, an honors pre-med biology major from Mendon, Massachusetts, has benefitted from serving as a student emergency medical technician (EMT).
鈥淚鈥檝e met a ton of people and made some really close friends,鈥 says Mendes, who also works as an EMT for Pridestar Trinity EMS, the city鈥檚 911 emergency service provider.
Mendes, whose mother is a medical assistant at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston and whose father repairs imaging equipment for Philips Healthcare, has been drawn to the medical profession since middle school.
鈥淟earning in biology class how the human body works 鈥 what can go wrong and how you can fix it 鈥 was super-interesting to me,鈥 says Mendes, who decided to become a River Hawk after learning about the EMS program on a campus tour.
鈥淭he fact that it was run by students on campus was really cool,鈥 he says.
Mendes joined as a cadet during his first year at UML, earned his EMT certification and began working up to 40 hours a week on campus as a sophomore. Promoted to field supervisor in his junior year, one of Mendes鈥 responsibilities was to coordinate standby coverage for events at the Tsongas Center 鈥 something that UML EMS used to assist Pridestar Trinity with, but now manages on its own.
鈥淪cheduling-wise, it鈥檚 more of a challenge, but it also gives us really good experience,鈥 he says.
Mendes plans to attend medical school and can see himself in either emergency or family medicine.
鈥淚鈥檝e shadowed a few doctors over the summer, and a lot of them have told me, 鈥榊ou might think you know what you want to do, but once you get into rounds and clinicals, you'll figure out what you really want to do,鈥欌 he says.
Whichever route Mendes chooses, he knows his EMS experience will serve him well.