MECP Help.... Please

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Hello All,

I am a 32 year old male that has been in a pretty active 14 year career in the US Navy as an Electronics Technician. But, it seems as though it is just a bunch of puppets in a show run by a couple of third graders with a bad sence of humor. I am looking for a career change and have noticed in my 14 years I have only really hung out with the Corpman and most of my friends are either in the Medical Profession or are Corpmen.

So with that said, it only seemed natural for me to try and become a medical professional myself. And with Uncle Sam footing the bill for school Nursing was the best option for me to get into the field.

Now for the questions:

1) What duties as a Navy Nurse can I look at getting into (I know there is a myriad of types of nurses, but what will the Navy offer.)

2) How complicated is the package that I have to fill out and submit?

3) I have read many of the posts here and they all mention volunteering at the Hospitals, but where do you begin with that task. Who can I contact?

4) Are you all satisfied with your career choices and why? Electronics has left me very unsatisfied and unfulfilled. I want to make a difference for not everyone but someone.

Thank you,

Stu

I have been in the Navy 11 1/2 years, finished MECP just over 5 years ago. The instruction has changed a little since I did the program but I hope this helps. First you have two choices for Nursing school in the navy - STA 21 or MECP. Biggest differences: STA 21: navy pays for school up to a limit, you must attend an ROTC school and no school required. MECP: you must have 30 credits, be able to finish nursing school in 36 months, pay for school yourself (you will still get full pay and benefits of your current rank and you can apply for financial aid/GI bill) - I went to school in Hawaii (I was already stationed there), lived in housing and got my full pay and benefits including COLA and you go to OIS (officer indoc school) afterwards. STA-21 you do your officer training during school. You can search yahoo for both instructions and the go-bys for all memos, applications ect. You will need to find a board of nurses to interview you to submit with your package (for me my career counseler took care of this since I was at a medical command -I was an HM- but you will need to the CCC at the closest medical command (or Carriers have nurses as well, you could try that.) My advice: First review both programs, then start applying to schools. If you put your package in next fall (probably too late this year) you would start school in fall of 2010. Remember you must have 10 years of commissioned service to retire so if you are at 14 now, won't start school for two years, then three years of school you will be at 19, you will have to go to 29 years to retire. I have no regrets about my commission but make sure you are ready to go back to the bottom (Ensign) with 19 years behind you.

As far as what you would do: First a big hospital - a couple of years on a multi-service ward (med-surg), second command maybe a little smaller, maybe a clinic (Great Lakes is great for this) with leadership positions, then move on to Div O and if you stick around long enough eventually department or clinic head. Good luck.

ladies/gents,

can anyone describe the typical nurse assignment as it relates to ships and shore. I am trying to understand the general % of nurses that are on ships and for how long etc. I understand my concept of the navy is largely based on media and assumptions and would appreciate your input, thanks!

v/r

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NAVYNURSE1977,

Thank you for the truth and heads up, a 19 year Ensign is a bit hard to swallow. I am at the credit level right now, being an ET we get a lot of credit for what we have done. Just not sure if it is where I need it to be. This is a gut check and will need to keep this in the fore front of my decision.

NAVYNURSE1977,

Thank you for the truth and heads up, a 19 year Ensign is a bit hard to swallow. I am at the credit level right now, being an ET we get a lot of credit for what we have done. Just not sure if it is where I need it to be. This is a gut check and will need to keep this in the fore front of my decision.

I was a Hospital Corpsman who got out after 7 years to go to school in order to become a nurse. I reference to the credits you received for you work as an ET in the navy (SMART Transcript), you should talk to a school advisor about those. I had a lot of credits as a HM that applied to my program, but what they don't tell you is that those usually tranfer over as C's at most colleges, same with CLEP scores. So, if you end up doing that you may have a crappy GPA before you even take your first class. This is important because RN and BSN programs, i have come to find out, are EXTREMELY competitive. The BSN program i applied for had an average applicant GPA of 3.77 and that was not for getting accepted, that was just for getting invited in to sit down and have an interview with the school. Just a heads up. Good luck!

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