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Saw this in this week's Army Times. If its already been posted sorry.
Personal docs to screen recruits?
WHAT’S UP: There aren’t enough doctors in Canada’s military, and that’s causing problems when it comes to signing up enlistees for Canadian forces. Consequently, Canadian defense officials are considering a proposal to allow personal doctors to do initial screening of military recruits as a work-around, according to a story in the Toronto Star newspaper. The story quotes Canadian officials thinking out loud about the proposal, which would effectively leave it to a recruit’s personal physician to make the initial medical assessment as to the candidate’s suitability for military service. The proposal comes as a senior military official there, frustrated at the rate at which candidates are recruited, trained and enter the military, laid out ambitious new recruiting goals.
WHAT’S NEXT: Such a proposal could have a significant impact on the attrition rates of Canadian soldiers because the proposal could remove the baseline standard. Although enlistees would be seen by military doctors later in the process, the initial assessments might allow a variety of unqualified or marginally qualified people in the door who later wash out. Meanwhile, the military is offering $225,000 Canadian ($200,000 U.S.) bonuses, free tuition and increasing salaries to medical school students to get them to enroll in the service.
Personal docs to screen recruits?
WHAT’S UP: There aren’t enough doctors in Canada’s military, and that’s causing problems when it comes to signing up enlistees for Canadian forces. Consequently, Canadian defense officials are considering a proposal to allow personal doctors to do initial screening of military recruits as a work-around, according to a story in the Toronto Star newspaper. The story quotes Canadian officials thinking out loud about the proposal, which would effectively leave it to a recruit’s personal physician to make the initial medical assessment as to the candidate’s suitability for military service. The proposal comes as a senior military official there, frustrated at the rate at which candidates are recruited, trained and enter the military, laid out ambitious new recruiting goals.
WHAT’S NEXT: Such a proposal could have a significant impact on the attrition rates of Canadian soldiers because the proposal could remove the baseline standard. Although enlistees would be seen by military doctors later in the process, the initial assessments might allow a variety of unqualified or marginally qualified people in the door who later wash out. Meanwhile, the military is offering $225,000 Canadian ($200,000 U.S.) bonuses, free tuition and increasing salaries to medical school students to get them to enroll in the service.