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If I sign up for the Army Nurse Corp, will I have to end up being in the reserve or becoming a soldier? |
The Army says that you'll get a $10,000 bonus and they'll pay your student loans. But I'll have to commit to 8 years on active or inactive duty if I join the Army Nurse Corp. I don't want to end up going to war in Iraq as a soldier if somehow I don't qualify for the Nurse Corp or they all along are truly recruiting me for that. I appreciate what the soldiers do for our country but being a female and hearing all thats gone on on the news, it's scary to me. But I'd love to join the Army Nurse Corp. I'm not afraid of going to Iraq. I just want to be a nurse and not end up doing something I don't really want to sign up for, like ending up being a soldier. Visit the Army Nurse Corps homepage: http://armynursecorps.amedd.army.mil/ you could very likely be called up. my son and many others like him in the guard and reserve have been called up for two or more years. he spent 2 yrs straight. it is the military after all. know the risk. you will see action somewhere. The only thing i'm sure of is that being as pretty as i think you are, the soldiers won't be bored... Maybe you shouldnt be joining the military then. if you have your BSN you'll be a 2Lt in the Army Nurse Corps, a commissioned officer. You may well be sent to Iraq, or anywhere you're needed. You will have a service commitment of whatever you sign up for, but it wont be as a soldier. Read your contract. Make sure to get your recruiter to put your specific interests in the contract. If they break it, then they will be in breach of contract, and you will have a choice whether or not to stay. Also, the military usually sends new recruits to school from the beginning, so if you finish, you will have a very good chance of getting in. They will always need nurses. But remember, just like any other branch, you are a rifleman first. If you sign up to be a nurse that is what you will be. Besides that, you are a female, and not eligible for combat arms. You will receive some basic military training, to include weapons like the M-16 and the 9mm pistol, so that you can defend yourself if necessary. You will be a soldier and a nurse. You will be an officer, but work as a nurse in a field hospital or Army hospital. You could very well end up in Iraq. But not in combat. Be that may...my job in the army is a mechanic. Im not a combat soldier, yet i did receive combat training, as all soldiers do. As long as you have a BSN you will be a Army Nurse, but you will have to pass a very easy Officer's Basic Course and pass a Psychical Fitness Test...your duty could be from a Troop Medical Clinic to a Army Medical Center to a Combat Support Hospital...In Iraq they have fix facilities so it is like working in a regular hospital... No matter what MOS you are, you're taught combat if i'm correct. If you get deployed to Iraq, you'll have to carry a firearm, when out and about. Read your contract, don't skim through it, read it completely. When they say 8-years, it means you have to serve 4-years on Active Duty and 4-years in the Reserves. You will still go to Basic Training and become a Soldier. What are your chances of going to Iraq? Highly likely. Your job is very critical during the war and every military personnel overseas need your expertise. Yes, you will be soldier, because Army nurses are all Commissioned Officers... You could serve in active duty, or the reserves (And possibly get called up)...With an eight year term of service, it is virtually impossible, I believe, that you would not be deploying somewhere at some point - It may not necessarily be Iraq, but somewhere, sometime down the line. if you are a nurse and have the MOS for Nurse you would go as a nurse Don't sign on the dotted line just yet. You have a year until you graduate. Then you have several weeks before you can take boards, then several weeks longer before you hear whether or not you passed those. Once you have that piece of paper from your state's health department identifying you as a Registered Professional Nurse, you can go discuss the possibilities with the various service's recruiters. Talk to ALL of the services. |
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