Time commitment for military

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a-mac2003

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I am trying to decide if I want to use the military and the HPSP scholarship to pay for medical school. I have heard two different answers in regards to the amount of service required after you are done. 1) Four years of active duty and you are done 2) FOur years of active duty, then four years of reserves. Does anyone know from first hand knowledge. The recruiter is still checking on this for me.

Thank you
 
In my opinion I wouldn't bother with military scholarship as they steal so much of your life from you. You must give one year for every year they pay for your schooling PLUS you have to do a military residency. There shall be no civilian time allotted until after you are finished. That means, depending on what you going to specialize in, it could be anywhere from 7-10 years.


Herp
 
You do not have to do a military residency, you can do a civilian residency, but they prefer that you do a military residency.

Blake
 
It depends on which branch you are considering. When I looked into this a few years back, the Navy required 4 years of active duty and 4 years of reserves. Then you were done. You didn't have to do a military residency, but if you do, those years as a resident will count toward your commitment.

The Air Force, on the other hand, required 4 yrs active duty, 4 yrs active reserve, and then on inactive reserve for the rest of your life. What that means is, if there is another draft, they could call you up long after you've fulfilled your time and draft you into service again. Now, that seems farfetched....but, perhaps not as farfetched as I would've believed a few years ago.

As I understand it, there aren't a whole lot of military residencies to be had anyway, so most people end up doing their residency at a civilian hospital and then going into the service (with the rank of an officer, btw).

Good luck in deciding! It's not a bad deal if you've any desire at all to serve in the military.

Willow
 
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