Medics in the military...
jtpaintball70,
Here are a few tidbits to help you out...
1. If you want to join, even with the pins, there is a way... don't let anyone tell you no. If you want it bad enough you can get it. If they deny you kick it up the recruiting and MEPS chain of command. I had a plate and two pins in my elbow went all the way to the Defense Medical Review Board (DOMERB ).
2. Get into shape, being a medic in no joke. Others will depend on you.
3. As for the Pros and Cons, (I'm Navy so i'm a little biased) but will try to answer for you.
-Airforce- will do a lot of clinic work unless flying as Aircrew (clinic work because there are not that many front line troops.
-Army- can have multiple jobs including front line infantry, tanks or flying aircrew
-Coast Guard- (who cares...just kidding)- Can function as a SAR swimmer. Doing EMT-Basic stuff
-Navy- (my favorite)- We serve with both Navy and USMC personnel. As a corpsman you can be on a ship or shore, if you don't like that you can go to the marines as Infantry doc, Wing Doc, or Supply Doc. We work with all branches Army, Air Force, CG, and USMC. You can go IA (Individual Augmentee) where you can do a tour with another branch of service.
4. Finish you Paramedic- We do alot of cool stuff as medics (military not civ) but the certs do not translate to the civilian side. I know plenty of Navy and Air Force Medics that did ALS stuff when in, but couldn't even work as a basic with out going back through school pipeline again (EMT-B then Paramedic...etc)
5. If you have any other question feel free to ask, we'll see if somebody can point you in the right direction.