It goes without saying that your extensive medical knowledge is crucial to this role. But you’ll need so much more than that. Medical Officers in the Royal Navy use their skills in some of the most challenging environments in the world. After your initial training, you might be deployed to a conflict zone or providing medical support during humanitarian aid operations working in a maritime or land environment. You might also find yourself taking on a clinical leadership role at a Joint Hospital Group Unit in Plymouth, Portsmouth and Birmingham, working in specialist areas and caring for both NHS and military patients from all three services. As well as advancing your medical career, you’ll also have the opportunity to gain skills you’d never encounter as a civilian. Diving? Parachuting? They’re yours for the taking.

  • Join at a rank that reflects your experience and be part of a world-class medical service that’s respected far beyond the Armed Forces
  • You will start your career as a General Duties Medical Officer. This means you can be deployed on a ship, submarine or with the Royal Marines anywhere in the world taking charge of all personnel's medical needs, whether that be day to day medical issues or emergency situations.
  • Gain knowledge and experience in tropical and diving medicine as well as chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear medicine to understand the broad skill set you need to do your job in a variety of challenging and unique environments.

Your role

  • Join at a rank that reflects your experience and be part of a world-class medical service that’s respected far beyond the Armed Forces
  • You will start your career as a General Duties Medical Officer. This means you can be deployed on a ship, submarine or with the Royal Marines anywhere in the world taking charge of all personnel's medical needs, whether that be day to day medical issues or emergency situations.
  • Gain knowledge and experience in tropical and diving medicine as well as chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear medicine to understand the broad skill set you need to do your job in a variety of challenging and unique environments.

What you’ll get

  • A salary of at least £59,319 from day one
  • Good pay and promotion prospects throughout your career
  • An excellent pension scheme
  • Six weeks of paid holiday every year
  • Free medical and dental care
  • Sports and adventurous training opportunities

What you'll need

  • You must be between 18 and 39 years old, and under 39 if you still need professional training
  • You need a medical degree, full General Medical Council registration, plus four months’ foundation training in Emergency Medical and General Practice
  • You must be a British or Irish national, a Commonwealth citizen or a Dual National
  • A Body Mass Index (BMI) between 18 and 28 (between 17 and 27 if under 18)
  • Pass the Naval Swimming Test

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