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ARMY
NURSE CORPS FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

General Questions
Education/Clinical Training Questions
Military Training Questions
Personal Life Questions
Lehigh Valley Army ROTC provides scholarship opportunities, leadership training, upper division placement, and a future career to college nursing students. Students may enroll as a freshman, sophomore, or as late as their junior year in college. Upon successful completion of the program, students are commissioned as officers in the Army Nurse Corps, and serve as nurses at military hospitals and medical facilities in the active Army, the National Guard, and the Army Reserves.
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GENERAL QUESTIONS:
- What is Army ROTC?
Army ROTC is an elective curriculum you take along
with your required college classes. It prepares you with the tools,
training and experiences that will help you succeed in any competitive
environment. Along with great leadership training, Army ROTC can pay for
your college tuition, too. You will have a normal college student
experience like everyone else on campus, but when you graduate, you will
be an Officer in the Army who earns over $40,000 starting salary, free
medical benefits and 30 days paid vacation annually.
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- What are the student's responsibilities?
If you want to try the program out first, there is no obligation for taking the class during your Freshman and Sophomore year. It’s like test driving a car. See if it’s for you. If not, drop it like any other class. If it is, apply for a scholarship.
- Attend ROTC classes (meets 1-2 times per week)
- Attend ROTC lab (once every other week)
- Attend physical training sessions (2-4 times per week depending on class standing)
- Attend field training exercises (twice a semester)
- Attend and successfully complete the Leadership Development and Assessment Course (5 weeks at Fort Lewis, WA) during the summer following the Junior year
- Maintain a GPA of 2.5
- Receive a Bachelor of Science in Nursing and pass the nursing state board examination (NCLEX)
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- How long do I serve as an Army Nurse Officer?
You can serve full-time in the Army for
three years (four years for scholarship winners). Selected Cadets may
choose to serve part-time in the U.S. Army Reserve or Army National Guard
while pursuing a civilian career.
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- Why join Army ROTC as a nursing student?
If you're considering an undergraduate Nursing degree, joining Army ROTC can
enhance your leadership skills and critical-thinking abilities while
providing financial support to help make your personal and professional
goals a reality. You will also find pride in knowing you are preparing to
serve your country as an Army Nurse Corps Officer.
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- Why join the Army Nurse Corps as a nurse?
Being a Nurse in the Army
provides you with opportunities not found in the civilian world. As an Army
Nurse and Officer, you will have the respect of your peers and coworkers, as
well as opportunities to train and serve in a variety of specialties. The
autonomy to practice nursing as part of the Army Health Care Team is unlike
most civilian health care facilities. Your professional judgment will be the
driving force behind ensuring that all aspects of a patient's care are
addressed, and you'll be responsible for initiating coordination of a
patient's multidisciplinary care.
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EDUCATION/CLINICAL TRAINING QUESTIONS:
- What kind of degree must I obtain?
All Active Duty
Army Nurse Corps officers are graduates of an accredited BSN program and
hold, at a minimum, the degree of BSN. The United States’ Army Reserves
selects both ADN/RNs and BSN/RNs into their service.
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- What type of scholarship is available and how do I know if I qualify?
The Army ROTC program offers two-, three- or four-year scholarships for
undergraduate Nursing students. Scholarships pay 100% tuition and mandatory fees, $900 annual book costs, a monthly tax-free stipend b/w
$300-500, based on academic year, NCLEX fees, and NCLEX review course tuition. The following criteria must be met to be
eligible for consideration:
- Be a U.S. citizen
- Be between ages 17
and 27 (must be 30 or younger when you graduate)
- Have a College GPA
of at least 2.5 (must be competitive to progress within the school of
nursing program)
- Have a high school
diploma or equivalent
- Score minimum 920
on the SAT or 19 on the ACT
- Meet physical
standards (pass the Army Physical Fitness Test)
- Be medically
qualified (pass an Army physical)
- Agree to accept a
commission and serve in the Army on Active Duty or in a Reserve
Component (U.S. Army Reserve or Army National Guard)
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- What is the Nurse Summer Training Program?
Nursing students have the opportunity to attend the Nurse Summer Training Program (NSTP) between their junior and senior years in the nursing program. After completing the Leadership Development and Assessment Course, nursing students can request to work in an Army hospital for three weeks at locations across the globe, to include Hawaii, Korea, Germany, and in the United States. Each student will be assigned an Army Nurse Corps officer as their preceptor/instructor to guide them through the nursing process. The student will learn valuable management and leadership skills and have the opportunity to apply them in a health care environment, setting themselves ahead of their peers when they return to campus. The student can request to work in the nursing specialty of their choice. Students are paid for the three weeks, and all travel and room & board expenses are paid for by the Army.
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- What if I want to get my Master’s degree?
The Army has
a wonderful opportunity for those that wish to continue their educational
training. Each year, Army nurses are selected to attend fully funded
graduate training via the Long Term Health Education & Training program. For 2005, 88 nurses were selected to attend either a Master’s or Doctoral
program. Each nurse will continue to receive their full salary/benefits
even though their job is to be a full-time student and they will have their
tuition paid by the Army.
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- What if I want to work in a clinical specialty?
The
Army Nurse Corps has six clinical specialty training courses, in addition to
the Master’s training programs offered through the Long Term Health
Education & Training program. These specialty courses are offered as 12-16
week, fully funded courses in the following areas: Intensive Care,
Emergency, Labor & Delivery, Psychiatric, Community Health and Peri-operative
Care.
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- When will I become a charge nurse or head nurse?
All
new Army nurses will receive some type of organized hospital orientation
once they arrive at their first duty station. This orientation can range
anywhere from 3-8 weeks, depending on your location and skill level. As
soon as you complete orientation, you will begin your training to learn the
skills required as a Charge Nurse. Most Army nurses will be able to
function at that level by about 6 months of training. The opportunity to
become a Clinical Head Nurse varies greatly from hospital to hospital
throughout the Army and there is no set time for gaining this position. You
can become a head nurse as early as 3 and as late as 12 years, but most hold
the position at the 5-7 year mark and last anywhere from 1-3 years in each
position.
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MILITARY TRAINING QUESTIONS:
- Do I have to go to “boot camp”?
No. The Army ROTC
program is an Officer commissioning program. “Boot camp”, or Basic
Training, is an enlisted Soldier training program. All Army Nurse Corps
Officers attend a specialized Officer Basic Course. It is a 10-week school
in San Antonio, Texas, where you learn the basics about how to be an Army
Officer. There is a limited (3-4 day) field training exercise where you get
your first chance to see what an Army field hospital looks like. This
exercise is a hands-on experience of how medical care is delivered in a
field setting.
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- Will I have to deploy?
Army nurses are an
integral part of a medical team that is dedicated to protecting the lives of
those who safeguard America. As an Army Nurse, there are possibilities to
deploy to areas around the world in support of military operations. These
opportunities are sporadic and vary in nature from providing hurricane
relief support in the Caribbean to supporting combat operations in Iraq. Even though the media focus on the large number of military members deployed
around the world, there are actually very few Army nurses that are currently
deployed and, in a typical year, less than a hundred or so are deployed
around the world at any given time. An overwhelming majority of your time
as an Army nurse will be spent as a clinical nurse working in a large,
state-of-the-art medical facility. During those rare times that you may be
called upon to serve away from your hospital, it will be because it is
absolutely essential to have the best medical care in the world available to
those in need. Some examples of those needing our expertise are: children
who live in a third world country that does not have the facilities or
resources to provide such simple life saving measures as administering
immunizations or performing cleft lip/palate repair; victims of natural
disasters that have no medical assets as the result of a hurricane, tornado
or tsunami; and the brave Soldiers that risk their lives to defend and
support freedom throughout the world who, once wounded in combat, require
immediate trauma resuscitation and medical treatment to ensure a safe return
home.
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- How much danger will I be in?
Although military
operations can be extremely hazardous for those folks that are on the front
lines, it is actually relatively safe for those supporting elements that are
not directly involved in combat operations, such as a hospital. The Army
takes great measures to ensure the safety of the medical facilities and
personnel assigned to each unit. As of November 1, 2005, there have been
no fatalities within the Army Nurse Corps in any military operations
conducted as part of the United States’ War on Terror. One Army nurse was
quoted as saying; “I’ve been an Army Nurse for 10 years. I have deployed
oversees to combat areas on two separate occasions and, in my travels, have
never felt that the Army has placed me in any more danger than when I drive
my car, fly in an airplane or walk alone through downtown at night. There
is, without a doubt, a need for medical personnel to be there in order to
save lives. This overwhelming need far outweighs the unlikely chance of
danger.”
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- What is a “field hospital”?
A “field” hospital is
what the Army uses as a deployable medical facility. They are basically
tents that are moved via rail/ship/truck and set-up by the personnel
assigned to each facility. They range in size from 296 to 500 beds and are
fully equipped with lights, ac/heating units, running water, dining and
laundry/bath facilities. These hospitals are capable of performing
life-saving surgeries, emergency care, peri-operative care, intensive care,
inpatient ward care, x-rays/CT scans, laboratory/blood bank services, dental
repair, physical therapy and pharmaceutical services. When these services
are no longer necessary, the hospital is taken down, packed up and returned
to a storage facility.
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- How often do I have to do physical training?
The
Physical Training, or PT, schedule is dependent on your ROTC department. PT
is usually 3 times per week and the schedule will be arranged around your
clinical class schedule. Once on active duty, Army nurses work in a
hospital and have rotating day/night shifts that last 8 or 12 hours. Due to
24-hour operations, Army hospitals do not conduct organized PT on a regular
basis. Organized PT sessions do occur in May and October each year so all
staff can participate in the required Army Physical Fitness Test, or APFT. Therefore, your physical training and preparations for the APFT are done on
an individual basis that best fits your work/sleep schedule.
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PERSONAL LIFE QUESTIONS:
- What if I want to get married?
What happens to my spouse?
Many Army Nurse Corps Officers (about 67%) are married and have children. As an Officer in the Army, your family will be allowed to move with you to
your duty assignment. Of our married Officers, many are married to other
service members. If that is the case, there are Army programs available to
ensure you and your spouse are located together at an Army post.
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- Do I have to live in open barracks and use community showers?
No. As an Army Officer you will be able to afford comfortable housing
either on or near the Army installation to which you are assigned.
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- How often do I have to move?
As an officer in
the Army, you typically move from one duty location to another every 3-4
years. The Army will take care of your moving expenses and provides
additional funding for travel, lodging and meal costs during your move. In
addition, a contracted moving agency will come to your home, pack/ship your
belongings, deliver them once you’ve found your next home and unpack/remove
all unwanted packing materials from your home.
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- Where will my first duty assignment be located?
There
are 37 military hospitals throughout the U.S, Korea and Germany. Most are
located within the continental United States. During your senior year, you
will request an assignment at the hospital that you would like to be
assigned. The Army Nurse Corps works extremely hard to ensure all the new
graduates receive one of their top three choices of location assignments.
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- What if I don’t want to move to where the Army wants to send me?
If you are assigned to an area that doesn’t suit your needs, each Army nurse
has an Army Nurse Corps branch manager who works with each individual to
find a location that will make him/her happy while providing the necessary
opportunities for career advancement within the Army Nurse Corps and, also,
meet the needs of the Army. Once you have met your active duty obligation
incurred during ROTC, you have the option of resigning from active duty and
either remaining where you are currently located or having the Army move you
home.
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