Army Life
Emergency [UK] Lyrics


We have lyrics for 'Army Life' by these artists:


Konflikt Čo je, čo je, čo je, čo je Neznášam vojakov a…
The Exploited You never give up, you never give up, you never…
The Spits Hey pretty baby, we're going out tonight So put your blue…





We have lyrics for these tracks by Emergency [UK]:


State of Emergency Listen to the sirens as they wail People going crazy, the…


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Most interesting comment from YouTube:

@TurdFurgeson571

When applying to med school, you can apply to USUHS, the Uniformed Services University's school of medicine. You'll join a particular branch who will act as a kind of sponsor during your medical training. The training will consist of all the scientific rigor you'd expect in a civilian program with an additional military bent on some subject matter. When you're done with med school, you'll train in a residency program that your branch needs you in or you might go straight into practice as a general practitioner (no residency). You will owe them four years of service whenever you hit the fleet.

Alternatively, you could apply to the Health Professional Scholars Program (HPSP) via a branch of your choice (e.g. Navy or Airforce) once you have acceptance into at least one medical school. They will fund your tuition and fees and they will give you a stipend of about $2k/month, but you owe them service once you're done with med school training. "What about residency?" you might ask. You will apply to the military match, which takes place in January. You may petition to participate in the civilian match as well and try your luck at getting into a program of your choosing that way if the mil match didn't work out for you.

The big difference is time. If you join the military residency, your time in service begins right away during residency training (e.g. your years toward qualifying retirement, which is usually 20 years). If you choose a civilian residency this clock does not start for you. So choose wisely. If you plan on retiring in the military, or aren't sure, I'd go for the GP or mil residency, because your "retirement clock" starts sooner/at a younger age for you. If you're just using the military so you don't have debt and have some spending money while you're in school (not the best financial move for most specialties due to opportunity costs) then do the civ residency and have the chance to rank your favorite program.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Your "paypack years" don't begin until you are done with medical training and are practicing medicine as a doc assigned to a unit somewhere. If you do the military residency, are you done with training? No. So while your time in residency counts toward your years of qualified service for the purposes of retirement, your residency does not count toward your "payback years," which you owe for the scolarship and stipends. This difference between the "payback clock" and the "retirement clock" is true in all of the above scenarios and is something you need to consider if you're going to be happy in the long term. If you attend the military med school (USUHS) four years of med school does not count toward retirement even though you're serving with the military and have a rank. Instead, four years is added onto your total years of service once you hit qualifying retirement, and these extra four years is used to determine your level of retirement benefits.

There are also programs that will pay you money while you're in a civilian residency program -- in exchange for years of service of course. You can even get in this program if you've taken the med school scholarship, the HPSP. The program will pay you money in addition to your stipend from the civilian residency program, usually adding about $40k to $50k per year to your income, putting your income in the neighborhood of $100k. But you will owe a year for every year you use this program. So if you took both the scholarship and the residency assistance, you could be owing nearly a decade of service. If your plan was to retire from the service as a doc, I'd say take all this free money. If not, it may not be worth it because you won't have much leverage to take the lucrative financial opportunities that may become available to you as you gain experience in your specialty. Military salaries don't hold a candle to the private sector.



All comments from YouTube:

@annanowak-matsuzaka7348

Admiration for choosing such a challenging path of career to aid the soldiers with often the most difficult types of body trauma imaginable.
Admiration for being who you are a men of perseverance, resilience, character and what’s absolutely first necessity in this line of work strong mind and decisiveness for others’.
From a civilian (and like little kid comparing to you) perspective, hearing about your involvement in research: What could be a reason for a woman with healthy, balanced diet (who from time to time seem to be receiving ‘strange punches’ to her abdomen or squeezes in her maternal parts which as a one having no knowledge she would describe ‘wireless’) having nails breaking and cheeping like paper, even all over the nail plate??!! Often after strange body tremors at night!??

@georgevillalobos8441

how does becoming a military doc work? do you join before med school? go to med school on an army scholarship? join during med school? join before or after residency?

@TurdFurgeson571

When applying to med school, you can apply to USUHS, the Uniformed Services University's school of medicine. You'll join a particular branch who will act as a kind of sponsor during your medical training. The training will consist of all the scientific rigor you'd expect in a civilian program with an additional military bent on some subject matter. When you're done with med school, you'll train in a residency program that your branch needs you in or you might go straight into practice as a general practitioner (no residency). You will owe them four years of service whenever you hit the fleet.

Alternatively, you could apply to the Health Professional Scholars Program (HPSP) via a branch of your choice (e.g. Navy or Airforce) once you have acceptance into at least one medical school. They will fund your tuition and fees and they will give you a stipend of about $2k/month, but you owe them service once you're done with med school training. "What about residency?" you might ask. You will apply to the military match, which takes place in January. You may petition to participate in the civilian match as well and try your luck at getting into a program of your choosing that way if the mil match didn't work out for you.

The big difference is time. If you join the military residency, your time in service begins right away during residency training (e.g. your years toward qualifying retirement, which is usually 20 years). If you choose a civilian residency this clock does not start for you. So choose wisely. If you plan on retiring in the military, or aren't sure, I'd go for the GP or mil residency, because your "retirement clock" starts sooner/at a younger age for you. If you're just using the military so you don't have debt and have some spending money while you're in school (not the best financial move for most specialties due to opportunity costs) then do the civ residency and have the chance to rank your favorite program.

IMPORTANT NOTE: Your "paypack years" don't begin until you are done with medical training and are practicing medicine as a doc assigned to a unit somewhere. If you do the military residency, are you done with training? No. So while your time in residency counts toward your years of qualified service for the purposes of retirement, your residency does not count toward your "payback years," which you owe for the scolarship and stipends. This difference between the "payback clock" and the "retirement clock" is true in all of the above scenarios and is something you need to consider if you're going to be happy in the long term. If you attend the military med school (USUHS) four years of med school does not count toward retirement even though you're serving with the military and have a rank. Instead, four years is added onto your total years of service once you hit qualifying retirement, and these extra four years is used to determine your level of retirement benefits.

There are also programs that will pay you money while you're in a civilian residency program -- in exchange for years of service of course. You can even get in this program if you've taken the med school scholarship, the HPSP. The program will pay you money in addition to your stipend from the civilian residency program, usually adding about $40k to $50k per year to your income, putting your income in the neighborhood of $100k. But you will owe a year for every year you use this program. So if you took both the scholarship and the residency assistance, you could be owing nearly a decade of service. If your plan was to retire from the service as a doc, I'd say take all this free money. If not, it may not be worth it because you won't have much leverage to take the lucrative financial opportunities that may become available to you as you gain experience in your specialty. Military salaries don't hold a candle to the private sector.

@d3r3kyasmar

Do you accept a foreign BSN Graduate Nurse? US citizen here but obtained my Nursing degree from other country.

@3gsummit

Can you still serve as a doc if you are a little older?

@derrickhutcherson493

It all depends on your age. How old are you? I am a healthcare recruiter for the US Army. Give me a call at 5405521070

@apotebill

You can get a waiver if your specialty is needed. I know an ortho who went in at 61.

@Mypotatostory

How long is the shift for military er doc?

@TurdFurgeson571

Yes

@brianhays1797

Go green!

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