Military pay is determined by time in grade (rank) and time in service (seniority). Example: an active duty Army Private First Class with two years in would receive a monthly base pay of $1920.90 before taxes and deductions. (I was a PFC in 1974 and got $325.10 a month.) If you are married or have dependents, then there are additional allowances paid.
They're paid according to their pay grade, time in service, and additional allowances they may be entitled to, such as Hazardous Duty Pay. There is no extra pay for simply being a medic, thus, a medic with the rank of Sergeant who has four years time in service will be paid the same as an infantryman or truck driver with equal rank and time in service.
Simple answer: Yes. The German army in WWII regarded medics much the same as Americans did medics and navy corpsmen. Medics in the German army wore armlets with a red cross on a white background, were generally unarmed and were considered protected under the Geneva Conventions.
There are a number of types of 'medics' there are emergency response medics, combat medics and first aiders, who all need different kinds of training. Each are involved in different fields of aid and have their own specialties.
they vary the pay if an e-1 gets up to $1500 to $3500 a day it all depends on how many power busters they acomplished.
Medics - TV series - ended on 1995-11-24.
Medics - TV series - was created on 1990-11-14.
They can serve in the medical field, but they can't be actual combat medics.
Medics treated all soldiers went hurt in battle.
Yes, there were many US Navy medics.
The cast of Medics in Vietnam - 2008 includes: John Irvin as himself
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Combat medics
Yes, I am pretty sure that there were medics for the Airborne. They had to have someone to treat there wounded. I think they usually picked random recruits and had them assigned as medics. YES, all airborne units have medics assigned during WW2 to present............no one was picked at random to be a medic. All medics were trained to treat wonded......... According to Band of Brothers which was based primarily on the memoirs of Richard Winters, a platoon leader who became the company commander and then battalion commander of a unit in the 101st Airborne during WWII the medics in his unit were chosen (seemingly at random) to become medics after basic combat training. After going through medic school they returned to the unit to attend airborne school. That being said the airborne had then as it does today medics and medical units.