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Performs clinical laboratory analyses on blood, urine, and other biological specimens. Operates laboratory equipment and reports results to support patient diagnosis and treatment in Army medical facilities.
“Perform clinical laboratory procedures supporting medical diagnosis and treatment. Work with advanced laboratory equipment in Army medical facilities. Develop medical laboratory skills with direct civilian certification pathways. One of the most technical and intellectually engaging Army medical specialties.”
You run laboratory procedures — hematology, chemistry, urinalysis, microbiology, blood banking — in Army clinical laboratories that support patient care. The technical skill requirement is real: laboratory science involves precision instrument operation, quality control procedures, result interpretation, and an understanding of what the numbers mean in a clinical context. You will perform a CBC, a chemistry panel, or a blood culture and produce a result that a clinician uses to make a treatment decision. That chain of responsibility is the professional standard that the lab culture is built around. Army clinical labs at medical centers are staffed well enough to provide genuine training, and the patient volume at larger installations provides case diversity. The civilian pathway from 68K is one of the more direct medical MOS transitions: Medical Laboratory Technician (MLT) certification through ASCP is achievable with your Army training and experience. The civilian laboratory field — hospital labs, reference labs, public health labs — has consistent demand and reasonable pay. A subset of 68K soldiers use the foundation to pursue Medical Laboratory Scientist (MLS) degrees and advance into supervisory or research laboratory roles. The intellectual engagement of clinical laboratory work stays consistent regardless of setting.
What this actually is in the real world
Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job — and what they pay.
Medical and Clinical Laboratory Technologists
Strong matchSalary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program, retrieved Feb 2026. BLS.gov cannot vouch for the data or analyses derived from these data after the data have been retrieved from BLS.gov.
Figures marked “Estimated” are approximations based on the closest civilian equivalent and may not reflect actual compensation. Use as a rough guide, not a guarantee.
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