Posted on Aug 29, 2018
Laura Danielle
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I'm an ER nurse with 2 years of experience and a BSN. I had a 3.4 GPA in nursing school, but with my previous degree it averages to a 3.2. I have recommendations from a former naval NP, a trauma surgeon, my supervisor, and two other NPs from the ER. I'm currently talking with a Navy HP recruiter who is also an officer. Anyone have any insight into life as a nurse? What things do I need to watch out for in regards to recruitment? What are the typical schedules like? I understand that I need to want to be a Navy officer first and foremost and that I will also have officer duties. How is bedside care? What are deployments like as a nurse? With experience, where are your typical first duty stations? Is it all life on a ship as a nurse or are you mainly on shore duty? Would you do it again if you could?
Posted in these groups: Staff NurseER NurseUsmc2lt ENSGeneral of the army rank insignia Officer
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Responses: 7
Lt Col Charlie Brown
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If you work ER or trauma, I suspect you will get deployed. The military tends to be younger, healthier patients except for our wounded. Our hospitals do have all the wards and specialities you would find in a big civilian medical center. You will get 4 weeks vacation starting year one.
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Laura Danielle
Laura Danielle
>1 y
I would actually look forward to getting deployed I think. My recruiter said most navy nurses getting deployed get trained for 3 months at LA trauma, which would be amazing training. He and a couple of friends said that getting deployed could actually be hard right now, and lots of people are jockeying for it. Thank you for your response! I appreciate it.
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LTC Jason Mackay
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Edited >1 y ago
Laura Danielle have you looked at any other branches or is there a particular desire to be a Naval Officer? The Army also has a robust healthcare professional recruiting program. Most Army Nurses work from a fixed treatment facility, then are deployed as needed through the PROFIS (Professional Filler System) to a unit you are usually habitually aligned to. Usually nurses are pipelined in such a way that you become charge nurses fairly quickly. You end up working on accreditation additional duties (for whatever replaced JACHO).

Deployments for Military Nurses these days are to fixed or semi fixed or expeditionary treatment facilities of one sort or another. They range from Level 1 (40 patient hold and surgical in a Medical Company in a Brigade Combat Team) to Level 3 Facilities (like Bagram or what used to be in Balad Iraq) or augmenting a theater asset like Landshtul in outside of Ramestein AB in Germany. Army nurses depending on specialty may also serve on Forward Surgical Teams. There are also aeromedical evacuation functions that typically have flight nurses, principally the domain of Air Force medical personnel.

The Navy has one hospital ship, USNS Comfort. It is manned according to mission from D.C. Area MTFs and puts to sea for specific missions. These are rare and by exception according to the former Commander of Military Sealift Command who was responsible for the ship and ship's company operations (not medical). Committing a Hospital Ship is almost a bigger commitment of national power than committing a carrier task group as there is only one ship.

LTC Paul Labrador I'm sure I have butchered this. care to fill in the blanks?
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SN Greg Wright
SN Greg Wright
>1 y
COL David Turk - Well that'd be an instant waiver in the Navy. :)
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LTC Jason Mackay
LTC Jason Mackay
>1 y
SN Greg Wright - thought they mothballed Mercy. I didn't mean that was the only choice for a Navy Nurse, kind of rushed through that part of the comment.
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SN Greg Wright
SN Greg Wright
>1 y
LTC Jason Mackay - They're talking about it, but she's still active as far as my google fu can tell. They don't have anything in the pipeline to replace them, so I'm sure they'll stretch them out as long as they can.

As an anecdote, I've been on the Mercy - she was home-ported at Naval Supply Center, Oakland, at the same time my ship was in the early 90s. They're pretty impressive. They began life as Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCC's) before their conversion.
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LTC Jason Mackay
LTC Jason Mackay
>1 y
SN Greg Wright - it is quite a capability.
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MAJ(P) Health Services Human Resources
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Laura, I cannot speak for the Navy, but having just left command in an Army AMEDD Recruiting Company I can tell you as you first come in, your work will be much like that of a traditional MED Surge Nurse in a civilian hospital...hours and shifts will vary based on location but probably (3-4) 12 hour shifts. as you grow in rank and depending on your path which can be much different in Army vs Navy, more admin functions will take place and perhaps a diminishing of clinical duties...again, varies on your own specific path. I have several nurse friends, one went to the Army Baylor MHA program and now does almost 99% admin but maintains her license as a BSN. I have another who got here certification and changed from 66H MED SURG to Labor and Delivery Nurse and strictly works there, with shift rotations like two months of days then nights etc....the one with MHA is strictly M-F 830-430. Still want the Navy? hahaha
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