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- Jun 15, 2017
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Reserve doc. I've been in APMC for the last few years. Ask away.
What’s APMC?
My question: why does this program even exist
Yes, but do we really need a reserve of physicians so subspecialized that no one outside of a major MTF knows what to do with them? We barely know what to do with all the hyper subspecialized docs we have on active duty.Because the chances of a specialist that’s willing to be in the army reserve living near unit that needs that specialist is close to zero. This is a mechanism to link willing physicians to empty slots regardless of geography
I remember that program, and knew someone in it. I hope they don't call themselves veterans.. Reminds me of that old National guard scam/boondoggle where a bunch of Rambos served out their entire commitment in med school and residency- when they were non-deployable and entirely useless to operational units and the .Mil as a whole.
Yes, but do we really need a reserve of physicians so subspecialized that no one outside of a major MTF knows what to do with them? We barely know what to do with all the hyper subspecialized docs we have on active duty..
This program sounds like a total waste of money, even with our unnecessarily bloated military budgets.......
Get rid of useless programs like this and use the money to incentivize experienced AD specialists and sub-specialists to stay in.
- ex 61N
One of the best parts of the APMC is that they will constantly loose your height/weight/APFT. About every month or two you will get an email that you are delinquent on your bi-annual performance evaluation. Doesn't matter how many times you send it in. Doesn't matter if you are physically present at the APMC to have an APFT. They will loose all records and tell you that you are delinquent.
As of 2010 I saw, of Army servicemembers who deployed, 60% were active Army and 40% were Reserve Corps. I thought I'd read that this RC percentage was even higher when limited to AMEDD (but never saw actual data).
For the ARNG-side, almost every doc in my state is a Field Surgeon and deploys as such (some repeatedly). APMC makes sense for folks either in specialties that can't backfill for 62B. You could make the argument that we shouldn't recruit for those specialties and I'd support it. I was part of the ASR scam/boondoggle that 61November referred to back in the day; he's right that the majority involved did their time and got out while in residency (though in fairness, I recruited 5 docs into the Army ARNG, 2 of whom are still serving, as am I). If I had any input, I'd get rid of MDSSP entirely, focus STRAP heavily, and divert funds to the Accession Bonus.
The RC side feels a bit like being a fire extinguisher. The threads during hot and heavy deployment years focus on "why would you join the Reserve Corps? You could get torn away from your practice q2 years..." and in the absence of these deployments the threads turn to "why do we need them?"
The problem isn't with the RC, it's with Army recruiting assets we don't need. Which is true with active as well as RC. We recruit medical students because by the time someone is a fully trained, they have much less interest in military service. I'd love to see a trial of wiping away all pre-residency recruitment schemes (including HPSP) and offering a big fat Accession Bonus to get exactly who we want, but this is not to be.
Are you prior active duty? If so, why are you doing this? The pension?
I wouldn't call general orthopods, ENTs, neurosurgeons and ophthalmologists 'so subspecialized'.
A better complaint is why does the .mil let AD urologists do a Peds fellowship?
Isn't retention <10% after ADSO is fulfilled? I would be hard pressed to call less than 1 in 10 "often".who often stay a lot longer than 4 years after they do their residencies.
The APMC isn't a program, it is a unit. Any army reserve physician, dentist, veterinarian, audiologist, certain nursing, students, etc is either assigned to this unit or attached to this unit.
They also manage all reserve soldiers who are students that are currently in a stipend program. Once they finish their training program the soldier gets pushed to a local reserve unit, but they will still have a connection to the APMC for credentialing purposes and mission purposes. If the reserve soldier gets assigned to unit that is very far away from where the live then they will either continue to drill/train with a closer unit or do their drill another way. So therefore, a family physician can drill with a local infantry reserve unit, but not deploy with them for an infantry mission.
The APMC's purpose has nothing to do with super specialized docs. And it has nothing to do with a discontinued NG program. Without the APMC you would have a very fragmented reserve medical corp and wouldn't be getting reserve docs to fill needed deployment spots.
So now I'm just confused. The guys who are too subspecialized to drill includes general orthopedic surgeons? The Army Reserves can't figure out somewhere for ortho to drill for 2 weeks per year? In the Navy reserves these guys appear in our hospitals all of the time. They are very helpful for making PCS season and TAD skill maintenance work for the AD guys. Also there is a certain minimum amount of contact with the military you need to retain your knowledge base for the computer systems and bureaucracy that you need to navigate. The Army doesn't think is worth paying for two weeks in a hotel to make sure their docs actually know how to use Essentris/Genesis/whatever?
I just joined the USAR. With APMC and didn't realize a lot of stuff like where I got the 1380 reimbursed or when or where I got the annual bonus from. APMC says my unit was the one in charge of releasing it. Unit didn't seem to know. It's a mess.AMEDD Professional Management Command
You are assigned to a unit that has a slot for you.
But, often for specialists, that slot is across the country, so there is no practical way to drill.
So, you are attached to APMC (in greater Atlanta area) for all your admin stuff.
For drill, you are required to drill on your own so to speak. This also includes 'volunteering' at a local civilian facility if you are > 90 miles from a reserve unit that can use you. When you drill, you have someone sign off on your 1380 that just says you where there and did something. You are required to drill with your unit during their 2 week AT. At first, this was only for every other year, now it is every year since money is supposedly available now. My unit was cool with me not coming out and I was able to do CGSC via TASS over an 18 month period. Much better than distance learning.
If you are prior active duty, it can be awesome. You truly are an army of one. Nobody messes with you. Downside? You are an army of one. No one is gonna give you a heads up on anything. It can be lonely as was alluded to above. For folks that have never been in the .mil, I think it is a bad idea. Because you don't even know what to ask.
APMC is staffed mostly by DoD civilians. Processing my 1380s for pay has never been an issue. Credentialing folks are pretty decent too. But if you have a problem or questions that falls out of the ordinary monthly processing, it is a quagmire. About 20% of voicemails are returned. 50/50 if your first email is answered. One question per email. Any others are ignored. Email on Monday, get a response by Thursday. Any other followup or clarifications? Sorry. Send a new email next week. Very little back and forth conversation. And sadly, they are very slow to offer any advice. If you don't ask, they most certainly won't volunteer the information. Very frustrating.
I had to get my ORB fixed for my promotion board last year. APMC did absolutely nothing. Fortunately, by unit fixed all my problems incredible quickly.
My one key if you go APMC is to get to know your unit via email and phone. Most APMC folks don't. I only was able to drill with my unit once, three years ago. It has paid off immensely. I know our UA and he is sharp. Some issues are limited as to what he can do but still pretty awesome at helping me if and when he can.
Looking forward to deploying with them in the near future as a 90 day bogger. It will be my first and very likely last deployment.
Sign up for the APMC SFRR. It's a 4 day tdy where the admin side of APMC can take care of the usual things. It's offered a couple times a year. I'd email them. Bonus you sign up on the HRC website for and then they take a while for processing. Most RSTs 1380s will be processed through APMC....it's going to take a while to get the agreements setup to do the rotations in civilian centers or MTFs (my experience) but those 1380s will definitely go through APMC. CME ones can go through either, but definitely need pre-approval from APMC if going through them (and likely your unit to if it's something you setup as a RST option through them). I entered USAR after AD so I came with all the schooling I cared about. My unit was responsible for the process of getting new hires into DCC and BOLC....and that seems like total FUBAR for reservists at the moment (docs completing commitments before even getting in BOLC/DCC).I just joined the USAR. With APMC and didn't realize a lot of stuff like where I got the 1380 reimbursed or when or where I got the annual bonus from. APMC says my unit was the one in charge of releasing it. Unit didn't seem to know. It's a mess.
I just had a few questions. Am I officially with the Reserve and required to drill every weekend if I have not completed BOLC yet? I also have yet to schedule my DCC. Heard from unit I had to have a PT (ACFT) test first.
Yes, you’re in the army and required to drill.I just joined the USAR. With APMC and didn't realize a lot of stuff like where I got the 1380 reimbursed or when or where I got the annual bonus from. APMC says my unit was the one in charge of releasing it. Unit didn't seem to know. It's a mess.
I just had a few questions. Am I officially with the Reserve and required to drill every weekend if I have not completed BOLC yet? I also have yet to schedule my DCC. Heard from unit I had to have a PT (ACFT) test first.