I think people are misunderstanding me. I'm not saying I want to go out playing "army man" and get shot at. BUT I would like to be there to offer care for those who are getting shot at.
Understood - this motivates almost all of us.
But all the cool gunslinger schools that you MAY get to go to as a physician someday don't really prepare you for going to the place where you can generally do the most good: in the rear with the gear. No shame in being Dr. Fobbit.
There is a place, sometimes, for physicians to be relatively far forward. That place is usually some kind of mobile echelon 2 thing like the classic battalion aid station, but those are don't get used much these days. Invasions, yes; big operations like Fallujah, yes. Mature theaters like 2011 Afghanistan, not really.
The ONE time I was at one of those forward aid stations during a large multi-battalion, fast-moving, violent operation, I sat in my little BAS and watched helicopters fly all the casualties over my head to the FRSS 20 minutes away. I saw one injured Marine and a handful of locals. Next op, I arranged to stay in the rear at the FRSS, and took care of easily 10x as many patients.
Again, I think I understand what motivates you and I'm not knocking it in the least. Almost all of us here share that desire to take care of the privates and corporals doing the really dangerous work, hell, lots of us will cite that opportunity as the one big redeeming factor that makes military medicine life bearable.
Airborne school sounds like fun. There's an AR15 and AR10 on my coffee table right now waiting for me to clean them - they're great fun and I love shooting them, but if I'm ever holding a M4 while deployed something has gone horribly wrong. Likewise, you may have great fun going to SERE school, but if you're ever deliberately put in a position where you might need that training, something has gone horribly wrong.
There ARE a few physicians who work closely with special forces. Usually they're ex-SF guys who went to medical school, and then went home to the SF. JMHO, but that's not a place for our kind ...
The ultimate irony here is that eventually you'll wind up like the rest of us, weary as hell with all the CONUS-required officer-work, wishing they'd ease up and just let you be a doctor all the time.
😀