Hello,
You haven't said exactly which job role you are interested in, but as I have picked up your question I will assume you are talking about medical officers - if this is not the case, please let me know!
The short answer is yes. While the Army did used to employ a wider range of specialties, the focus is more on the more generalist specialties (with a few exceptions) that can provide the most support to deployments. While in the UK serving personnel have the same access to NHS care, so some specialties are not required. Each year Army manning will assess what specialities are required to support the Army and then recruit for these roles, so there is often a change in which specialties you can apply for. For example, a few years ago there were no radiology specialty training posts, but last year there was one.
Generally speaking the specialties that often have training jobs available are GP, public health, psychiatry, general medicine, general surgery, trauma and orthopaedics, anaesthetics, emergency medicine.
A cookie is a small file of letters and numbers that we store on your browser or the hard drive of your computer if you agree. Cookies contain information that is transferred to your computer's hard drive.
These are cookies that are required for the operation of our website. These essential cookies are always enabled because our website won’t work properly without them. You can switch off these cookies in your browser settings but you may then not be able to access all or parts of our website.
These allow us to recognise and count the number of users and to see how users move around our website when they are using it. This helps us to improve the way our website works.