• Please take a moment and update your account profile. If you have an updated account profile with basic information on why you are on Air Warriors it will help other people respond to your posts. How do you update your profile you ask?

    Go here:

    Edit Account Details and Profile

How to become a Flight Surgeon?

FlightDocDan

Member
pilot
@Rugger, I greatly appreciate the info, and it more than answers all of my questions I didn’t know to ask.
@Pianistwithwings; I'm a current Naval Flight Surgeon (DO) via HPSP...

I'm not sure if you are completely set on becoming a physician vs wanting to become a Flight Surgeon and stay in the Military... if your desire is the latter, also look into PA - Physician Assistant instead of MD/DO route.

If timing is a concern due to your age or whatever and becoming an physician isn't your biggest priority, Navy now allows PAs to become aeromedically designated (APA - Medical Service Corps Officer with Wings) and can function essentially the same as Naval Flight Surgeon (MD/DOs) with one exception of not able to participate in FNAEB/FFPB.

Unlike Physicain career path, you don't need resdiency training (3+ years post medical school) to be certified in a specialty to practice and your premedical pre-req for medical school application should mostly cover requirements for PA school... I'm not sure if HPSP will cover PA School but I believe HSCP will.

Just trying to expand your option for those looking to build quicker medical career especially if wanting to become a Flight Doc/APA. Also, since it seems like you are already aeronautically designated (NA/NFO), you can skip the flying portion of NAMI/Flight Surgeon Course and just attend the Aeromedical Part of training (about 2 months or so) to become a flight surgeon/APA with a possibility of applying for Aeromedical Dual-Designation Program and can concurrently function as NA/NFO while serving as a FS/APA.

Either case, best of luck!
 

Pianistwithwings

Grumpy Cat
None
@Pianistwithwings; I'm a current Naval Flight Surgeon (DO) via HPSP...

I'm not sure if you are completely set on becoming a physician vs wanting to become a Flight Surgeon and stay in the Military... if your desire is the latter, also look into PA - Physician Assistant instead of MD/DO route.

If timing is a concern due to your age or whatever and becoming an physician isn't your biggest priority, Navy now allows PAs to become aeromedically designated (APA - Medical Service Corps Officer with Wings) and can function essentially the same as Naval Flight Surgeon (MD/DOs) with one exception of not able to participate in FNAEB/FFPB.

Unlike Physician career path, you don't need residency training (3+ years post medical school) to be certified in a specialty to practice and your premedical pre-req for medical school application should mostly cover requirements for PA school... I'm not sure if HPSP will cover PA School but I believe HSCP will.

Just trying to expand your option for those looking to build quicker medical career especially if wanting to become a Flight Doc/APA. Also, since it seems like you are already aeronautically designated (NA/NFO), you can skip the flying portion of NAMI/Flight Surgeon Course and just attend the Aeromedical Part of training (about 2 months or so) to become a flight surgeon/APA with a possibility of applying for Aeromedical Dual-Designation Program and can concurrently function as NA/NFO while serving as a FS/APA.

Either case, best of luck!
Thank you for the information! I will have to look into PA programs. Becoming dual designated would be ideal.
 

Hair Warrior

Well-Known Member
Contributor
Any NAVET or medical corps recruiters out there? Friend is a former Navy doc, separated at O4 at the end of his service obligation, no longer in the IRR either. Currently a practicing doctor as a civilian. He is intrigued about Navy Reserve sign-on bonuses for docs and if he can come back at his last rank. I recall at DCOIC the sign-on bonuses for reserve nurses and docs were very high, but that was a long time ago.
 

FormerRecruitingGuru

Making Recruiting Great Again
Any NAVET or medical corps recruiters out there? Friend is a former Navy doc, separated at O4 at the end of his service obligation, no longer in the IRR either. Currently a practicing doctor as a civilian. He is intrigued about Navy Reserve sign-on bonuses for docs and if he can come back at his last rank. I recall at DCOIC the sign-on bonuses for reserve nurses and docs were very high, but that was a long time ago.

If you/your friend have LinkedIn, you can find plenty of them out there - including the medical ones. Even if they don't work/live nearby, you can always message them and they can redirect you to someone closer.

There's often NAVET bonuses and I usually see Medical on there, but similarly a NAVET recruiter would have the most recent numbers.
 
Top