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Live · Guide v1.062A · Career GuideValidated · Lightcast Labor DataUpdated · Q2 20262026 Cohort Active
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ARMY · 62ACareer Guide · Operations · VWC.CG.62A.R.04
62A · ARMY · Officer

Emergency Room
Physician.

Army 62A (Emergency Room Physician). 320 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 hours320DoD pipeline
ACE creditACEVaries based on prior education and experience; contact AMEDD for evaluation.
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 62A 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 62A training already gave you, and the specific gaps to close — not a generic checklist.

Already have06
  • 01
    Trauma ManagementData Analysis
  • 02
    Emergency Medical ProceduresProblem Solving
  • 03
    Military Electronic Health Record (Essentris/MHS GENESIS)Electronic Health Record (EHR) Systems
  • 04
    Rapid PrioritizationProject Management
  • 05
    Team SynchronizationTeam Leadership
  • 06
    Resource OptimizationResource Management
To learn08

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

+SQL for data querying+Data visualization tools (Tableau, Power BI)+Data warehousing concepts+HL7 and FHIR standards+HIPAA and healthcare data privacy regulations+Fundamentals of computer systems analysis+Project management methodologies (Agile, Scrum)+Cloud computing basics (AWS, Azure, GCP)
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 62A training built — and where they transfer in civilian work.

S.01

Rapid Prioritization

In a chaotic ER environment, 62A officers constantly triage patients, making split-second decisions on who needs immediate attention based on severity of injury and available resources.

Transfers to

This ability to quickly assess needs and prioritize actions in high-pressure situations translates directly to roles requiring decisive leadership and resource allocation under tight deadlines.

S.02

Situational Awareness

ER physicians must maintain constant awareness of incoming patients, available beds and equipment, staff capabilities, and potential threats (e.g., infectious diseases) to effectively manage the unit.

Transfers to

This skill in observing your environment and anticipating problems before they arise is highly valued in fast-paced civilian sectors.

S.03

Resource Optimization

Emergency Room doctors are constantly tasked with using limited resources such as beds, staff, and medications, as effectively as possible to treat the maximum number of patients.

Transfers to

The ability to creatively solve problems with limited resources can be an invaluable asset in almost any organization.

S.04

Degraded-Mode Operations

Emergency situations often involve equipment malfunction or supply shortages. ER doctors must be able to adapt treatment plans and find alternative solutions when optimal resources are unavailable.

Transfers to

Experience performing under less-than-ideal conditions is highly valuable in the civilian world, where resources aren't always available.

S.05

Team Synchronization

Leading teams in emergent patient care requires orchestrating nurses, specialists, and technicians to deliver safe and effective treatment.

Transfers to

The ability to lead multidisciplinary teams and execute complex operations makes you a good candidate for leadership positions.

/ 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.

Emergency Management Director

SOC 11-9161.00

You've been running emergency rooms, making critical decisions under pressure, and coordinating resources in life-or-death scenarios. You will excel at planning and directing disaster response efforts, ensuring community preparedness.

Adjacent · Match

Healthcare Consultant

SOC 13-1111.00

You've diagnosed problems, implemented solutions, and optimized healthcare delivery in the ER. Now, as a consultant, you can leverage that experience to improve efficiency and patient outcomes for hospitals and healthcare systems.

Adjacent · Match

Clinical Research Coordinator

SOC 13-2041.00

You've followed complex protocols and meticulously documented patient data. This experience makes you an ideal candidate to manage clinical trials, ensuring accuracy and adherence to regulations.

Adjacent · Match
/ 06 · Training & Certs

What you trained on.

SOURCE · DOD + ACE\nVALIDATED
Academy

AMEDD Medical Officer Basic Course (AMOB)

Fort Sam Houston
320hHours
8wkWeeks
ACECredit

Varies based on prior education and experience; contact AMEDD for evaluation.

Topics · 7
  • Trauma Management
  • Emergency Medical Procedures
  • Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS)
  • Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS)
  • Disaster Response
  • Military Medical Ethics
  • Combat Casualty Care
Partial coverage · 2
  • Registered Nurse (RN)70%

    Specific nursing procedures, medication administration protocols, and civilian healthcare regulations.

  • Emergency Medical Technician (EMT)80%

    Local protocols for emergency medical services, specific pharmacology, and ambulance operation.

Recommended next · 03
  • Certified Emergency Nurse (CEN)Adjacent
  • Trauma Nurse Core Course (TNCC)Adjacent
  • Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) InstructorAdjacent
/ 07 · Systems Translation

What you ran, in their words.

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

Military SystemCivilian EquivalentDomain
Forward Surgical Team (FST) EquipmentMobile Surgical Units/Emergency Medical SheltersOperations
Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) GuidelinesAdvanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) ProtocolsOperations
M9 Medical SetEmergency Medical Technician (EMT) Trauma KitsMedical
Blood banking and transfusion equipment used in Role 2 facilitiesHospital blood banks and transfusion servicesOperations
Military Electronic Health Record (Essentris/MHS GENESIS)Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems (e.g., Epic, Cerner)Data
Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) - Military VersionAdvanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS)Operations
/ Translator · Live

Translate 62A 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.