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Hey everyone, I posted a couple years ago about flight surgeon training and got some great responses. Just to add to that, I ended up deciding I want to practice medicine and be a physician as my main career so I did not apply to OCS and do pilot training. Instead I went straight to med school. Nonetheless, I still have an interest in flight, aerospace medicine, being a general practitioner, and public health, and it seems being a flight surgeon might let me incorporate these interests to varying degrees in one career.
I just had a few additional questions.
1) I've been doing some research online and someone on another forum mentioned that HPSP graduates get priority when applying to become flight surgeons. Is this true?
I ask because I am already an MS2 and did not apply for HPSP. Would being a non-HPSP grad be a big hindrance to my applying to the flight surgeon program? And if accepted, would I be given the same opportunities as those who did HPSP once in the program?
2) Also, from reading other threads, it seems there's 6 months of training, then you spend 2 years as a GMO with your assigned unit, then you do your residency (either within the military, or as a civilian). Is this correct? I imagine this also varies between Army, Air Force, and Navy.
What happens after a flight surgeon has done their residency? Do they become civilian doctors? Or are they expected to come back to the military (serving as the specialty they did the residency in)?
Do they have to apply to military residency programs only?
3) As a continuation of the previous question, I'd also like to know roughly how many years a non-HPSP grad flight surgeon should expect to dedicate to the military before they can choose to go back into civilian medicine. A user in the last thread said it could all add up to a decade before you are able to leave the military.
4) Lastly, I know you guys get this a lot, but what are the odds of a flight surgeon being placed in a unit that flies double seat fighter jets? I ask because I have an interest in working with fighter pilots and being around fighters, and to occasionally be a passenger in them (I realize I won't be flying myself, and I'd likely be spending a very very small amount of my time in these planes) but being around that environment would be an amazing opportunity. Do flight surgeons have any choice in the billet they get?
Sorry there's so many questions. I'm considering contacting a recruiter to get more info. If there's any other good/accurate websites or threads that have more info. on the life of a flight surgeon, and flight surgeon training that would be worth reading, I'd appreciate any links. I just want to start the process of educating myself on this properly.
I realize still have a lot to learn, and I'm certainly not 100% decided if this is something I want to do (hence I didn't apply for HPSP) but I've been thinking about pursuing this for so many years now, even before med school, that I don't want to just dismiss the idea but try to learn more about it and then make a decision. Thank you.
I just had a few additional questions.
1) I've been doing some research online and someone on another forum mentioned that HPSP graduates get priority when applying to become flight surgeons. Is this true?
I ask because I am already an MS2 and did not apply for HPSP. Would being a non-HPSP grad be a big hindrance to my applying to the flight surgeon program? And if accepted, would I be given the same opportunities as those who did HPSP once in the program?
2) Also, from reading other threads, it seems there's 6 months of training, then you spend 2 years as a GMO with your assigned unit, then you do your residency (either within the military, or as a civilian). Is this correct? I imagine this also varies between Army, Air Force, and Navy.
What happens after a flight surgeon has done their residency? Do they become civilian doctors? Or are they expected to come back to the military (serving as the specialty they did the residency in)?
Do they have to apply to military residency programs only?
3) As a continuation of the previous question, I'd also like to know roughly how many years a non-HPSP grad flight surgeon should expect to dedicate to the military before they can choose to go back into civilian medicine. A user in the last thread said it could all add up to a decade before you are able to leave the military.
4) Lastly, I know you guys get this a lot, but what are the odds of a flight surgeon being placed in a unit that flies double seat fighter jets? I ask because I have an interest in working with fighter pilots and being around fighters, and to occasionally be a passenger in them (I realize I won't be flying myself, and I'd likely be spending a very very small amount of my time in these planes) but being around that environment would be an amazing opportunity. Do flight surgeons have any choice in the billet they get?
Sorry there's so many questions. I'm considering contacting a recruiter to get more info. If there's any other good/accurate websites or threads that have more info. on the life of a flight surgeon, and flight surgeon training that would be worth reading, I'd appreciate any links. I just want to start the process of educating myself on this properly.
I realize still have a lot to learn, and I'm certainly not 100% decided if this is something I want to do (hence I didn't apply for HPSP) but I've been thinking about pursuing this for so many years now, even before med school, that I don't want to just dismiss the idea but try to learn more about it and then make a decision. Thank you.
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