Posted on Jul 9, 2020
Cadet CPT Student
3
3
0
I am currently finishing my first year of my doctorate of physical therapy program. I am also part of the ROTC program on campus. I have not contracted as of yet but i will in September.
I would also ideally prefer to stay in Florida because my wife is a lawyer in Florida, so she really cant practice outside of Florida but I don't mind looking elsewhere depending.
Posted in these groups: Thcapm08l9 ROTC32a7b69 65B: Physical Therapy
Avatar feed
Responses: 5
MSG Intermediate Care Technician
4
4
0
If you end up on Active Duty as a PT, you will end up going where they send you. You can request for Florida, but there is no guarantee you will get it.
(4)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small
MAJ Audiology
2
2
0
You have a few options.
You need to speak with an AMEDD recruiter though to explore them.

You could get the health scholarship program to finish PT and then you’d owe so many years of active duty as a direct commissioned PT in the army. You would go where the army wants to send you though. While in the program you won’t drill and won’t be deployed. So you’d be in Florida unti you graduate and then the army would send you where they want. In this day an age of telework your wife could possibly telework or find a job elsewhere.

You could finish your schooling and then direct commission into the guard or reserves and live in Florida and possibly be attached to a Florida unit if they had one available.

You need to speak with an amedd recruiter though.
(2)
Comment
(0)
MAJ Audiology
MAJ (Join to see)
>1 y
And the major is correct you can get the same benefits of ROTC in the health scholarship or STRAP program and it be oriented towards a medical officer whereas your ROTC is for line officers. Two totally different career paths in the army.
(0)
Reply
(0)
Avatar small
CPT Physical Therapist
1
1
0
In the past most Army PTs were stationed in hospitals or MTFs, but over the past 20 years or so we’ve been assigned directly to line units. It started with the Rangers, then SF, then Brigade Combat Teams. I’m currently working as a PT for an Infantry BCT (soon to be a Stryker BCT). A new program called Holistic Health and Fitness (H2F) is starting to roll out next FY which will create a ton of new PT positions across the force. Pretty much every BDE, not just BCTs, will have at least one PT on staff. Right now the major feeder for Army PTs is the Army-Baylor DPT program, but they only produce 18-20 PTs per year. Any shortfalls were met with direct commissions from the civilian side. Some years they would only take a couple PTs so it was pretty competitive. They generally took PTs with a few years of experience and a board speciality certification under their belts. With the rapid expansion of Army PT they will most likely take more new PTs. With that being said, it will still be a somewhat selective process. PT school is expensive and when you tell folks they can get things like student loan repayment for serving a few years, you better believe there will be a lot of applicants. I’m not trying to discourage but I’m trying to show that you have to be realistic and are really in no position to make demands for duty stations and what not. Off the top of my head the only Army PT position in Florida is with 7th SF Group. I can guarantee that you won’t get that position right out of school. Those positions generally require at least 2-5 years of experience, including some time spent as a brigade PT. I have a friend who was an 18D (SF Medic) before becoming a PT and he still need some MTF and BDE time before heading to Group. If being stationed outside of Florida is a deal breaker you might be disappointed. If you have any more questions feel free to send me a PM.
(1)
Comment
(0)
Avatar small

Join nearly 2 million former and current members of the US military, just like you.

close