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Live · Guide v1.044Y2 · Career GuideValidated · Lightcast Labor DataUpdated · Q2 20262026 Cohort Active
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USAF · 44Y2Career Guide · Operations · VWC.CG.44Y2.R.04
44Y2 · USAF · Enlisted

Critical Care
Physician.

Air Force 44Y2 (Critical Care Physician). 4,000 hours of formal training translate to 0 validated civilian career pathways with salary bands of $45K–$120K. Sourced from DoD training data and Lightcast labor signals.

Training hours4,000DoD pipeline
ACE creditACENo ACE credits recommended
Tech roles4mapped to your code
Civilian pathways0validated
Cert coverage2/5direct + partial
/ 01 · Tech Roles

Roles your code maps to.

SOURCE · BLS + LIGHTCAST ROLES · 4

Industry tech roles your 44Y2 background maps to — picked from BLS-anchored occupations using your training, cognitive skills, and systems experience.

Sort · Match descending
/ 02 · Skill Bridge

The gap, named.

What 44Y2 training already gave you, and the specific gaps to close — not a generic checklist.

Already have09
  • 01
    Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS)Rapid Prioritization and Response
  • 02
    Managing ventilators and infusion pumpsUnderstanding of complex system interactions
  • 03
    Experience with Electronic Health Records (EHR) - AHLTAExperience with healthcare data management systems
  • 04
    Coordination with specialistsCross-functional collaboration
  • 05
    Resource optimization in critical careEfficient resource allocation and management
  • 06
    Rapid PrioritizationTriage and address urgent needs efficiently
  • 07
    Situational AwarenessSee the big picture and predict potential problems
  • 08
    System ModelingUnderstand and predict how complex systems will react
  • 09
    Resource OptimizationMake the most of limited resources to achieve optimal results
To learn05

The concrete gap to bridge — specific to the roles above, not a generic checklist.

+SQL for data querying+Data visualization tools like Tableau or Power BI+HL7 standards and healthcare data interoperability+Project management methodologies (e.g., Agile, Scrum)+IT systems analysis and design
How VWC fits

Vets Who Code is a free, full-time software engineering accelerator for veterans, active duty, and military spouses. We close the fundamentals — terminal, web platform, AI tooling, portfolio projects — so the rest of this list becomes specialization, not square one.

See VWC Programs →
/ 04 · Hidden Strengths

What the code built.

Cognitive skills your 44Y2 training built — and where they transfer in civilian work.

S.01

Rapid Prioritization

As a critical care physician (44Y2), you constantly assess patients' conditions, rapidly identifying and addressing the most life-threatening issues first, often under immense time pressure.

Transfers to

This ability to quickly triage and address urgent needs translates to any environment where efficient decision-making is crucial under pressure. You excel at discerning what matters most and acting decisively.

S.02

Situational Awareness

You maintain a comprehensive understanding of the patient's condition, the status of available resources, and the broader medical environment to anticipate potential complications and adjust treatment plans accordingly.

Transfers to

This heightened awareness allows you to see the big picture, predict potential problems, and proactively adjust strategies to optimize outcomes, a valuable asset in dynamic environments.

S.03

System Modeling

You develop and utilize mental models of complex physiological systems to predict how patients will respond to treatment interventions and to understand the interplay of different organ systems in critical illness.

Transfers to

Your capacity to understand and predict how complex systems will react is a powerful skill. You can readily grasp how different elements of a project or organization interact and anticipate the downstream effects of decisions.

S.04

Resource Optimization

In the critical care setting, you are responsible for efficiently allocating limited resources—ventilators, medications, nursing staff—to maximize patient outcomes and ensure the unit functions effectively under pressure.

Transfers to

You are adept at making the most of limited resources to achieve optimal results. You understand how to distribute assets effectively and ensure the smooth operation of complex processes, even in high-pressure situations.

/ 05 · Non-Obvious Matches

Roles the recruiter won't suggest.

Adjacent civilian roles your training maps to that conventional military-to-civilian advice tends to miss.

Hospital Administrator

SOC 11-9111.00

You've been managing critical care activities, coordinating with other specialists, and advising on resource allocation. This makes you exceptionally qualified to oversee hospital operations, ensuring efficiency and quality of care.

Adjacent · Match

Emergency Management Director

SOC 11-9161.00

Your experience in critical care has honed your skills in rapid prioritization, situational awareness, and resource optimization. You're well-prepared to coordinate responses to emergencies and disasters, ensuring public safety and well-being.

Adjacent · Match

Healthcare Consultant

SOC 13-1111.00

Your expertise in examining, diagnosing, and treating diseases, combined with your understanding of system modeling, makes you an ideal consultant to help healthcare organizations improve their processes, optimize resource allocation, and enhance patient outcomes.

Adjacent · Match
/ 06 · Training & Certs

What you trained on.

SOURCE · DOD + ACE\nVALIDATED
Academy

Critical Care Medicine Fellowship

Various Locations
4,000hHours
104wkWeeks
ACECredit

No ACE credits recommended

Topics · 8
  • Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS)
  • Mechanical Ventilation Management
  • Hemodynamic Monitoring and Support
  • Sepsis Management
  • Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Management
  • Trauma Resuscitation
  • Ethical Considerations in Critical Care
  • Quality Improvement in Critical Care
Partial coverage · 2
  • American Board of Internal Medicine - Critical Care Medicine70%

    Specific requirements for board eligibility and examination content as defined by ABIM. Focus on maintaining current knowledge of critical care guidelines and advancements.

  • National Board of Echocardiography - Critical Care Echocardiography60%

    Formal training and demonstration of competency in performing and interpreting echocardiograms in the critical care setting, as required by the NBE.

Recommended next · 03
  • Fellow of the American College of Critical Care Medicine (FCCM)Adjacent
  • Certified Professional in Healthcare Quality (CPHQ)Adjacent
  • Disaster Management CertificationAdjacent
/ 07 · Systems Translation

What you ran, in their words.

Military systems you operated and their civilian equivalents for your resume.

Military SystemCivilian EquivalentDomain
Electronic Health Record (EHR) - Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology Application (AHLTA)Electronic Health Record (EHR) - Epic, Cerner, MeditechData
Patient Monitoring Systems (e.g., Philips IntelliVue, GE Healthcare)Patient Monitoring Systems (e.g., Philips, GE Healthcare)Operations
Ventilators (e.g., Dräger, Hamilton)Ventilators (e.g., Dräger, Hamilton)Operations
Infusion Pumps (e.g., Alaris)Infusion Pumps (e.g., Baxter, B. Braun)Operations
Blood Gas Analyzers (e.g., Radiometer, Roche)Blood Gas Analyzers (e.g., Radiometer, Roche)Operations
Defibrillators (e.g., ZOLL, Physio-Control)Defibrillators (e.g., ZOLL, Physio-Control)Operations
Central Monitoring StationsHospital Central Monitoring SystemsOperations
/ Translator · Live

Translate 44Y2 into a resume that ships.

Pair this guide with the VWC AI-powered translator: drop in your service record, get back ATS-optimized civilian resume language tuned to the tech roles above.