Professional

Extra curricular

 The Army Medical Services helps support the operational effectiveness of the British Army through healthcare. Here an unnamed reservist radiographer shares their experience with Synergy

Have you ever felt the desire to take your profession and use it to carry you all over the world, challenging yourself in ways you never thought possible, and all while having the flexibility to do it when you want and get paid for it? What other job would give you these opportunities but the British Army, and from my perspective the reserve element of it? 

I found myself joining the reserves in 2006 as an army radiographer, a decision that has to have been one of the best life opportunities I could have ever given myself. My 17 years in the reserves has enhanced both my personal and professional life, allowing me to develop and become the motivated and focused radiographer I am today.  

The Army Medical Services reserve has given me some amazing opportunities, from adventure training in the USA, Canada and Nepal (to name a few), to working in conflict zones, to proud leadership roles and responsibilities leading teams, and encouraging the achievements of others and seeing them flourish.

Developing skills 

I have been able to enhance my radiography career in many ways, having had multiple clinical CPD opportunities with multi-nation collaboration. I have worked with so many variations of equipment, capability and personnel over the years, which has generally enhanced my broader knowledge and outlook on how different radiology departments are managed. By instilling the values and standards and varied leadership role that I have taken on within the army, I have undoubtedly influenced my own style of management, which I take back and apply to my lead role within the NHS.

Learning new communication skills

Learning new communication skills

The military discipline and influence has grounded me and made me a better communicator, organiser and leader as well as giving me the ability to adapt to changing situations. Only a few months ago I found myself leading a 13-person expedition to Annapurna Base Camp at high altitude in Nepal - just one recent example of what it takes to lead and organise something as demanding and challenging and very different from the day job as a radiographer. 

With the opportunities for leadership exposure, travel and endless other niche activities, and a long list of training qualifications you can gain along the way, the army truly delivers its promise to grow and develop its soldiers. 

Travelling the world 

Deployments have ultimately been the pinnacle of my service with several deployments to Camp Shorabak in Afghanistan (previously Camp Bastion), to only last year supporting UN peacekeeping missions in Mali, West Africa. Again, this is not something you would find in your normal civilian diary.

My last deployment saw me become part of a Ground Manoeuvre Surgical Group, which deployed the role of the radiographer out on the ground to become frontline, operating hundreds of kilometres from a static base as part of a manoeuvrable mini field hospital - which we had to build and drop every time we moved!

In the desert

In the desert

I was X-raying and scanning patients quite literally in the sub-Saharan desert. Each deployment and experience differs but they always manage to push you out of your comfort zone, overwhelm you at times, but you are trained to focus and be resilient both mentally and physically, developing skills that cannot not be taught in a classroom or any course. Imagine the buzz, the freedom and opportunities that give you a true sense of belonging - this is the feeling deployment can give you.

So if you are reading this and like the narrative, why not consider joining the Army Medical Services reserve for new challenging and exciting opportunities? I cannot advocate more for this as an enhancement to your role as a radiographer and as an inspiring choice of career either as a regular soldier with full commitment or part time as a reservist. The opportunities are endless and all you have to do is take them.

Find out more...

Scan the QR code for more information on the Army Medical Services or contact dennis.mustard406@mod.gov.uk

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