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Nutrition Care Specialist

Provides nutritional assessment and counseling services to support soldier health and performance. Manages food service operations in medical treatment facilities and advises on dietary planning.

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Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

You'll provide nutritional assessment and counseling to soldiers, managing dietary needs in clinic settings and advising on unit nutritional programs. The Army exposes you to clinical dietetics in a military context — a useful foundation for careers in nutrition, dietetics, and food service management. NDTR (Nutrition and Dietetics Technician, Registered) credentialing is achievable post-service with examination. If a career in nutrition, dietetics, or food service management is your direction, 68M gives you early clinical exposure and a defined path toward credentialing.

What it's actually like

You support registered dietitians in providing clinical nutrition services to soldiers, which in practice means you're working with patients who have nutrition-related diagnoses, counseling soldiers whose eating habits reflect four years of DFAC food and field rations, and managing the administrative layer of clinical nutrition documentation. The patient population is genuinely interesting: athletes trying to optimize performance, soldiers with metabolic conditions, patients with post-surgical nutrition needs, and a notable number of soldiers who are eating themselves into a medical profile because nobody taught them anything about food. The clinical dietetic skills you develop — screening, assessment support, patient education, tube feeding management — are real. The civilian pathway requires more education: becoming a Registered Dietitian Nutritionist (RDN) requires a bachelor's in nutrition and a supervised practice program. But the clinical exposure from 68M is better preparation than most nutrition undergraduate students receive, and it gives you a realistic understanding of clinical dietetics before you commit to the educational investment. Nutrition counseling, wellness coaching, food service management, and public health nutrition are all fields that value your background even without the RDN credential.

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Training Pipeline
1
Basic Combat Training10w
Various
2
AIT — Nutrition Care Specialist10w
Fort Sam Houston (TX)
Clinical nutrition, therapeutic diets, food service management in medical facilities, patient nutritional screening.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job.

Cooks, Institution and Cafeteria

Strong match
Salary data coming soon
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