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  Officer - Medical   (MED)
A Career as an Officer
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Entry Plans

Medical Officer Training Plan ($)
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Direct Entry Officer - Physicians

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Understanding and Caring

Medical Officers are commissioned members of the Canadian Forces Medical Service. As a Medical Officer, your primary duty will be to practise medicine in the military milieu. In the Canadian Forces, both at home in Canada and overseas when deployed on operations, medical practice focuses on health protection and education, occupational health and safety, primary care, and environmental medicine, including the physiological challenges of high altitude and deep-sea diving.

Like other commissioned and senior non-commissioned members of the Canadian Forces, Medical Officers have a special responsibility: providing leadership. Leadership roles for Medical Officers vary according to interest, assignment and rank, but there is one constant: the Medical Officer leads the clinical team. With the right training, and a strong interest in tactics, administration and management, Medical Officers may also find opportunities to command sections, companies and units.

Medical Multimedia CD-ROM available for offline viewing



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Personal Characteristics

The Canadian Forces requires a special kind of professional: a physically fit individual who is socially adaptable and ready for the unusual and the unexpected. At the same time, he or she must be professionally versatile and capable of leadership in a variety of environments, both in Canada and overseas.

Formal Qualifications

You must meet Canadian Forces medical standards, and successfully complete a selection process that includes interviews and a wide range of examinations, including tests of physical fitness.

If you are not qualified for Direct Entry, you must be qualified for the Medical Officer Training Plan.

If you are a physician holding an unrestricted licence to practise family medicine in a Canadian province or territory, you are eligible for direct entry as a Medical Officer, with the following benefits:

  An enrolment bonus of either:
    $225,000, paid as a lump sum upon enrolment for a four-year obligation to serve in the Canadian Forces
    $80,000, paid as a lump sum upon enrolment for a two-year obligation to serve in the Canadian Forces. Should you wish to renew your engagement for two years, you will receive another $100,000.

  A salary comparable to the after-expenses income of a civilian practitioner. Experienced civilian physicians will be granted one pay level for each period of two years that they worked as a family physician, up to a maximum of pay level 5 ($159,948. Generous benefits, including:
    Participation in the Canadian Forces pension plan
    20 working days of vacation per year, increasing to 25 working days in the fifth year of service
    Free medical and dental care
    Maternity and parental leave in accordance with government-wide provisions
    No overhead:
Office space and support services are provided
Licensing fees are paid
Costs of professional development and training are covered

If you are a medical student or a resident in a family medicine program, you are eligible for the Medical Officer Training Plan (MOTP), which offers the following benefits:

  Full reimbursement of tuition fees and educational expenses, including books, instruments and supplies, student union fees and registration costs

  An annual salary ranging from $42,336 to $55,800, with generous benefits, including:

  Participation in the Canadian Forces pension plan

  20 working days of vacation time per year, increasing to 25 working days in the fifth year of service

  Free medical and dental care

  Maternity and parental leave in accordance with government-wide provisions

  MOTP candidates receive full pay and allowances throughout residency, and are eligible to be selected for further training in public health, occupational medicine, aerospace or tropical medicine, epidemiology or health care administration at an accredited university in Canada, the United States or overseas.

On successful completion of your residency in family medicine, you will be required to serve for four years in the Canadian Forces as a Medical Officer.

For information, contact a Medical Officer Recruiter:
  Quebec and the Maritimes: Lieutenant (N) Alex Dieryckx, Dieryckx.A@forces.gc.ca, (418) 930 4926.
  Ontario, Prairies, British Columbia, Yukon, Nunavut and North-West Territories: Captain Anne Johnston, Johnston.A@forces.gc.ca, (905) 516 8197.




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Basic Officer Training Course

The Initial Assessment Period (IAP - 5 weeks) and Basic Officer Training Period (BOTP - 9 weeks) are conducted at the Canadian Forces Leadership and Recruit School in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec. During IAP-BOTP, you will learn the principles of leadership, regulations and customs of the service, and first aid. You will also learn safe handling of personal weapons, a requirement of Medical Officers under the Geneva Conventions so they are prepared to assist in defence of their patients. IAP-BOTP includes a rigorous program of sports and fitness training, and may be followed by second-language training.

Basic Medical Officer Course

Upon successful completion of IAP-BOTP, you will go to the Canadian Forces Medical Services School at CFB Borden, Ontario, for the Basic Medical Officer Course (BMOC). During BMOC, you will be introduced to the organizational structure and history of the Canadian Forces Medical Service and the unique circumstances of military medicine. If you are posted to a Field Ambulance or other Army unit, you will also receive environmental training, an operational requirement that includes field exercises that may take place anywhere in the world.


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About 20 percent of your professional life as a Medical Officer will be spent at civilian facilities - and for specialists it is 100% of your professional time - where you will maintain and enhance your skills, especially in acute care and emergency medicine. This is done to ensure that you are always prepared for the challenges of military medicine.

The Canadian Forces actively supports Medical Officers’ efforts to develop and maintain clinical skills in all aspects of medicine. To that end, you will be given many opportunities for subsidized training on an annual basis — for example, attendance at medical conferences.


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You can expect to spend your first four years of service (after training) in one location, and to be promoted in accordance with your performance and your standing in comparison with your peers, gradually progressing to positions of increased responsibility and authority. When your obligatory service is completed, you may choose to be honourably released; however, if you decide to pursue a medical career in the Canadian Forces, you will be eligible for training as a specialist in a variety of fields.


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The Canadian Forces subsidizes Medical Officers who wish to specialize in surgery, orthopaedic surgery, anaesthesiology, internal medicine, psychiatry and radiology. You will be able to apply for post-graduate education after three years of service as a family practitioner.

All postgraduate education taken at public expense incurs further obligatory service, at the rate of two years of service for each year of sponsored education, to a maximum of five years for a single qualification. That is to say, support from the Canadian Forces for your training as a specialist in internal medicine, surgery, anaesthesiology, psychiatry or radiology brings an obligation to serve for five years on top of your original obligatory service.


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Wherever other CF members are sent, Medical Officers may also be sent, so you face a myriad of potential working conditions. Most of your time will be spent in clinical practice in garrison or on a base or wing, but you will also be expected to deploy. When serving overseas on operations, you will work and live in the same conditions as the other members of your unit, which can range from the semi-industrial setting of an airfield to the confines of a warship or the challenges of a tented camp in a developing country.

Although your daily work in garrison or on a base or wing will require little physical effort, you will be expected to meet the CF minimum standard for physical fitness. Whatever your assignment, you will have every opportunity to keep fit and participate in both team sports and individual activities.

Leadership is a key component in the life of an officer in the CF. Both at home and while deployed, Medical Officers can take on key leadership roles and, consequently, face significant leadership challenges. Physicians who embrace the principles of leadership and develop their leadership skills meet such challenges successfully.
Appropriate training, environmental clothing and equipment are provided, and Medical Officers’ health, safety and morale are closely monitered.


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Physician
 
    Publication Date: 2/22/2006 Top of Page Important Notices
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