Which brings me to 5) not as many slots for 68C as there is for 68W so I wish I had kept 68W as my primary MOS (we used to be 68WM6 so had to be a 68W first). 4) I’m not sure about the guard but I’ve mostly been in MSU units until recently being promoted to a Training unit and now getting ready for DS school and very much ready for the change. 3) not sure what the pass/fail rate is but my class went from 63 down to 47. Your so busy it doesn’t make a difference so be ready for a lot of studying, taking tests, and writing case studies on top of the clinical hours. ![]() 2) daily life is a bit better as prior service than for initial soldiers but by phase two it’s about the same. There are some skills you can do as a 68C most 68W don’t usually do such as more leadership roles in hospitals and administering medications. Hospital side is not high speed at all.ġ)scope of practice is somewhat more restricted due to operating under a license but when working in a DOD situation you are less restricted than as a civilian. Overall, being a Charlie isn’t bad but it’s different than being a medic. Most other stuff you have to ask for or finagle you way Into it. You can go EFMB, airborne, air assault pretty easily. They offered a bunch of bonuses reacently.Ħ)Charlie’s it depends of what you want. But not points are currently at 798 (secondary) and 540ish (primary). I will say ALL hospitals in the MILITARY (navy, army, etc) and going to be converting to joint (Defense Health Agency) DHA facilities so eventually you could be stationed at a place that’s not traditionally army.ĥ) promotions were easy cause pints were low. When it came time to sitting for your license we had a 95% first time go and 100% for second time.Ĥ) As for duty station it was pretty evenly split between hospitals vs CSHs. Phase II is pretty structured but everyone is treated like permanent party and you have free time and less games.ģ) idk what the pass/fail rate is but I noticed that most of the people that failed out where in phase I and if they failed out in phase II it’s cause they didn’t want to be nurses. Phase I is super structured pretty much 0500-1700 is planned out. So it really different.Ģ) For prior service in AIT it’s not bad. Charlies’ have a larger scope of practice day to day but are bound by their license and there is stuff whiskeys’ can do in some settings that Charlies’ can’t. ![]() ![]() Hi! Being a Charlie is great but very different than a whiskey.ġ) Whiskeys’ have a greater scope of practice down range, because they do what ever it takes to save someone.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |