Is 68D (Operating Room Specialist) a Good MOS?
United States Army · Military Occupational Specialty
Quick Facts — 68D (Operating Room Specialist)
AIT / Training
12 weeks
Training Location
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Career Field
Medical
Verdict: Not enough data
Based on 0 community reviews from verified service members
Score Breakdown
About 68D Operating Room Specialist
Assists surgeons and nurses in the operating room. Scrubs in for surgical procedures, manages sterile technique, prepares instruments, and supports surgical teams in garrison and deployed environments.
12 weeks
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Medical
Recruiter vs. Reality
What the Recruiter Says
You'll scrub in for surgical procedures — the real thing, with real surgeons, in Army ORs that handle everything from garrison elective cases to combat trauma in deployed environments. Civilian surgical technology programs charge $25-50K in tuition for the OR experience you'll accumulate in the Army for free. Surgical technologists are in shortage nationwide and earn $55-75K. The CST (Certified Surgical Technologist) exam is your post-service credential target — Army OR experience is excellent preparation. One of the medical specialist MOS codes with the most direct civilian clinical transition.
What It's Actually Like
You are a surgical tech in Army operating rooms, which means you scrub in, you know your instruments, you anticipate the surgeon's next move, and you maintain a sterile field under conditions that demand the kind of focus that other people find exhausting to sustain for a two-hour case. The technical competence required is real: instrument identification, sterile technique, draping procedures, surgical counts, specimen handling, understanding of surgical procedures well enough to pass instruments correctly. Army ORs perform everything from trauma surgery at Level I trauma centers to elective orthopedics at smaller installations, which means your case exposure is broad. The stress of an OR environment — the silence, the stakes, the hierarchy — is its own culture shock and then its own comfort zone. Civilian surgical technologist certification (CST through NBSTSA) is accessible after service and the civilian OR will feel familiar rather than foreign. Hospital systems, ambulatory surgery centers, and surgical specialty clinics are all hiring. The pay is solid, the hours are structured, and the work is one of the few healthcare support roles where the intellectual engagement never disappears because every surgeon and every case is different.