68P vs 65C
Radiology Specialist (USA) vs Dietitian (USA)
Two Army MOS codes that both got the "Army Strong" pitch and received very different interpretations of what that means every morning.
[Documentary narrator voice] "In the Army, a career field known as 68P — Radiology Specialist — reveals itself: the field setting aspect — portable X-ray in deployed environments — is something civilian radiographers rarely experience and that gives you a perspective on radiologic technology that is worth something to employers. Now for what happens when you pick the other MOS: The 65C — Dietitian — tells a different story entirely: commanders will call you about unit readiness and ask why their soldiers failed the ACFT — and somehow that becomes a nutrition conversation." [Fade to black. Credits list a therapist.] Two MOS codes that recruiting sees as "whatever gets the quota." Service members see it differently.
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 operate X-ray and radiographic imaging systems in Army medical facilities, positioning patients and producing diagnostic images that physicians depend on for clinical decisions. Radiologic technologists (RTs) are in consistent shortage nationwide and earn $60-80K. The ARRT certification is the post-service credential — Army radiology experience prepares you well for the ARRT examination, and radiologic technology programs value applicants with existing clinical imaging exposure. Few medical specialist MOS codes have as direct a civilian credentialing pathway as 68P.”
You operate diagnostic imaging equipment — conventional radiography, fluoroscopy, CT scanners, sometimes portable X-ray in field medical settings — and produce diagnostic quality images that radiologists and clinicians interpret to find what's broken, infected, or otherwise wrong. The technical skill requirement is real: positioning knowledge, technique selection, radiation protection, image quality assessment, artifact recognition. You are producing a clinical product under controlled conditions, and the product quality directly affects diagnostic accuracy. Army medical centers have current imaging equipment and sufficient patient volume to develop genuine technical proficiency. The field setting aspect — portable X-ray in deployed environments — is something civilian radiographers rarely experience and that gives you a perspective on radiologic technology that is worth something to employers. ARRT certification (RT(R)) is the civilian credential, and your Army training and experience qualify you for the examination. Civilian radiographers are in consistent demand in hospitals, imaging centers, orthopedic practices, and urgent care networks. The pay is strong for an allied health role that doesn't require a four-year degree. The shift-based nature of hospital radiology creates schedule flexibility that many veterans find valuable.
“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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