- Joined
- Dec 7, 2021
- Messages
- 43
- Reaction score
- 12
I am prior enlisted, now separated and pursuing medical school. I actually enjoyed the military when I was in, and cannot imagine not serving in the military again as a physician. With the GI bill however, I have been considering paying my own way and just joining as a reservist, with an eye towards the IMA program.
I figure I could go straight into the reserves after med school and enjoy a couple years as a flight surgeon (at a location/unit I actually get to choose). From there I'd apply to residency and USERRA my way through one weekend a month or switch to the IMA program.
From everything I have seen that interests me (operational medicine and trauma-focused specialties), the programs are open to screening reservist docs or even civilians. It feels like being an active duty doc through USU or HPSP would be a more clear-cut path, at the expense of not really getting to settle down anywhere until I retire. Being prior enlisted and being paid through med school and residency, the money from being AD would be at least very competitive to working as a civilian.
1) Are there any opportunities that active duty folks have that a reservist could never really get in on?
2) Is the network of military physicians small enough that reservists can feasibly hop on orders/deployments at will, and work locums in between? I guess what I'm looking for is to make the military a large part of my medical career, but without having to be entirely beholden to the almighty assignment personnel.
I figure I could go straight into the reserves after med school and enjoy a couple years as a flight surgeon (at a location/unit I actually get to choose). From there I'd apply to residency and USERRA my way through one weekend a month or switch to the IMA program.
From everything I have seen that interests me (operational medicine and trauma-focused specialties), the programs are open to screening reservist docs or even civilians. It feels like being an active duty doc through USU or HPSP would be a more clear-cut path, at the expense of not really getting to settle down anywhere until I retire. Being prior enlisted and being paid through med school and residency, the money from being AD would be at least very competitive to working as a civilian.
1) Are there any opportunities that active duty folks have that a reservist could never really get in on?
2) Is the network of military physicians small enough that reservists can feasibly hop on orders/deployments at will, and work locums in between? I guess what I'm looking for is to make the military a large part of my medical career, but without having to be entirely beholden to the almighty assignment personnel.