... What about the Navy Seal medics? According to my friend who is in the Marine Reconnaissance, those guys are pretty good medics.
They are but their medics aren't primarily focused and trained as medics. Also since Seals are under JSOC, they operate and have the army specops medics as part of their "task force/order" on many missions except the ones that are DevGru specific. All medics under the JSOC umbrella are first rate and are certified under one of the SOMC(special operations medic course)courses or it's derivatives as well as civilian EMT and paramedic training.
LOL I don't think signing a four to six year chunk of your life is really a fair trade for a class that runs about three grand in the civilian world and pays only slightly better (or in some cases worse) than being a Taco Bell manager. Not that I don't respect the hell out of PJs but pursuing that path to simply come out as a paramedic is a bit like going to medical school to better your chances of getting a job as a drug rep.
Exactly, unless you know being a PJ is exactly what you want, I would honestly tell you to forget it. These guys have one of the hardest pipelines around. 3% success aint no joke, and that's at least 70% individuals who've been training and preparing for this selection for twelve or more months.
Things to consider:
-you better like water as much as a fish
-you better not be afraid of heights
-you better be able to run
-you better be ready to be in a state of training for about two years, there's some schools/tasks you may recycle but most are critical, fail one and you're dropped
-you better be ready stay on a high deployment cycle
-you better know what SERE C-High Risk is because you're doing it
PJs are upper echelon special ops and as a medic in the team, your medicals skills are secondary and in addition
to your PJ training.
Your chances are about the same as if you go active duty AF with a "guaranteed" slot in the indoc class. Either way you're about as likely to wind up doing some other job instead of being the PJ you envisioned being when you went in.
^Yeap.
Same thing for 18D, in which you are just shy of a doctor as far as battle field medicine goes. While selection for the other "cool guy" units is based on a standard package other than a focus on medicine(ie not a requisite for earning a trident, etc.), SF medics have to pass the 18D course; all medical. Research the ever evolving final exam, talk about multi system trauma.
If you want to be a medic, I believe a sure shot would be the Army, you can get it in writing, have a broad selection of duty stations, no wazu hoops to jump through and pretty basic military life which you can escalate into more advance medicine by later going to a special ops unit outright or working in a support battalion for SF...after you've gotten your feet wet.
I've work with corps men marines working with MARSOC and Seals. These dudes are pretty bad *** too, but I don't know anything about their entry process. In my experiences they were very professional and competent.