68E vs 65C
Dental Specialist (USA) vs Dietitian (USA)
Same Army, same hooah, same conviction that the other MOS has it easier. This belief is load-bearing and must never be tested.
68E's Hinge prompt — "A typical Sunday for me": your duties include radiographs, prophylaxis (cleaning), chair-side assisting with restorations and extractions, patient education, and the administrative layer that every Army clinic runs on top of the clinical work. 65C's version: commanders will call you about unit readiness and ask why their soldiers failed the ACFT — and somehow that becomes a nutrition conversation. One of these profiles gets more matches. We won't say which. The reviews below will.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“You'll work chair-side with Army dentists — assisting during procedures, taking radiographs, managing instruments, and providing dental hygiene support across Army dental clinics. The volume of patients you'll see is high, and the variety of procedures is broad. Civilian dental assistant positions are in consistent demand with strong hiring rates for experienced assistants. Dental hygiene school and RDH licensure are realistic next steps — Army dental experience counts toward the clinical hours requirement in most programs. If dentistry is your direction, 68E is a paid on-ramp.”
You work in Army dental clinics, which serve a patient population that approaches dental appointments with the specific dread of people who have been told their whole life that they should have brushed their teeth more. Your duties include radiographs, prophylaxis (cleaning), chair-side assisting with restorations and extractions, patient education, and the administrative layer that every Army clinic runs on top of the clinical work. Army dental care is actually decent — the equipment is current, the providers are credentialed, and the demand from soldiers is consistent. The work is routine enough to develop genuine proficiency and varied enough to stay interesting. The civilian pathway from 68E is one of the more direct in the medical MOS family: dental hygiene programs actively recruit people with dental assisting experience, and the clinical foundation you build in the Army is better preparation than most civilian assistants receive. Dental hygienists make excellent salaries in most markets. Dental assistant certification is achievable during your service. A few soldiers leverage the foundation toward dental school, which requires additional education but is not an unreasonable ambition for someone who's seen what dentists actually do every day.
“You will be the Army's expert on fueling the force — the officer who ensures soldiers eat right, perform at their peak, and recover from injury or illness through evidence-based nutrition. You'll run clinical nutrition programs at military treatment facilities, counsel patients on therapeutic diets, advise commanders on unit feeding and operational rations, and manage nutrition services in the field. Your RD credential carries real clinical weight, and the Army gives you the rank and authority to act on it across a wide patient population.”
Army dietitians live in two worlds: the MTF clinic and the field, and neither one is quite what you pictured in your RD training. In the clinic, you're managing therapeutic nutrition for a patient panel that includes everything from eating disorder cases to post-surgical recovery to soldiers with diabetes who can't stop eating at the DFAC. Commanders will call you about unit readiness and ask why their soldiers failed the ACFT — and somehow that becomes a nutrition conversation. Deployed, you're advising on ration planning, water quality, and preventing the GI illness that will sideline more troops than the enemy. Your RD credential is required to commission, so you're already credentialed before you arrive. The challenge is practicing evidence-based nutrition inside an institution that has strong opinions about what soldiers should eat and not always great infrastructure to deliver it.
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