If you have a full scholarship, yes they will pay for a bachelor's degree. The payment of medical school will depend on you being accepted and the monies available.
Typically, its a bachelors, masters, and then doctorate. However, there are a few and ifs and buts.
You can. You'll have to do a minimum of two years active duty, at least. The same eight year Mandatory Service Obligation is still in effect.. if you ETS before eight years from the day you enlist, you'll be placed in the Individual Ready Reserve and subject to recall if needed.
Medical schools require a regionally-accredited Bachelor's degree to matriculate. In short, yes.
yes
You'll have to complete your contract before you do anything. When you get within your reenlistment window, you'll be sent to the Retention NCO.. if they don't convince you to reenlist, you'll still have to stop by the Reserve Component Retention NCO before you clear.. they'll try to steer you towards the Army Reserve or Army National Guard. You will have to contact a Coast Guard Recruiter yourself... first and foremost, you need to find out if they accept prior service personnel... they may not. But if you're looking to transfer out of your active duty contract and be placed instead into a reserve component, it's not likely to happen.
Active intervention in a medical sense is very important. It means that people are being cared for before they are ill, as opposed to waiting to treat until illness hits.
LBJ was a Lieutenant Commander in the US Navy Reserve and served briefly on active duty before being recalled by the President to return to Congress.
Yes the maximum age is 42. That means you have to be at MEPS leaving for basic before your 42nd bday comes around. Same for reserve or active duty.
A pediatrician is a specialized medical doctor. In the United States that means acquiring a four year bachelors degree that includes pre medical classes. Typically those classes are a year of physics, year of biology, year of basic chem and a year of organic chem and calculus. After a bachelors you go on to apply to medical school, and after four years of med school you do a residency(a training in a hospital before you officially become a doctor, in order to be accepted into a residency you have to pass an exam after medical school). The residency is typically three to four years long for a pediatirician.
He's contract will state 8 years. Yes he will have to serve reserve for 4 more years after he decides to get out before ahnd. It is inactive reserves. Meaning they call you in the event you are needed for duty. I got out at 4.5 years and was never notified and never served in the reserves. It is up to the soldier.
Yes an Associate and bachelors come before your Masters degree.
You do not need a degree to take the MCAT, most premedical students take the MCAT their junior year before they graduate, however you do need a bachelors degree in something to be accepted into an American medical school