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Career pathways, CV tools, interview preparation and readiness resources for clinicians entering cruise, expedition, offshore and remote medicine.

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Ship Doctor

Lead medical officer on cruise or merchant vessels. Independent practice, emergency stabilisation and bridge communication.

Ship Nurse

Acute care nursing in isolated maritime settings. Triage, medication administration, patient monitoring and outbreak support.

Offshore Medic

Pre-hospital care and occupational health on oil, gas and industrial platforms. Trauma stabilisation and helicopter medevac coordination.

Expedition Clinician

Remote and wilderness medicine on expedition vessels. Field trauma, environmental emergencies and austere-setting care.

Maritime Public Health Officer

Outbreak surveillance, sanitation compliance, CDC VSP reporting and environmental health on vessels.

Candidate Details

Professional Summary

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    Chest Pain at Sea

    Ship Doctor

    "A 62-year-old passenger presents with central chest pain, diaphoresis and nausea. You are 14 hours from the nearest port. What do you do?"

    Pass-Level Answer

    Perform an ECG, administer aspirin and GTN, establish IV access, give morphine for pain and monitor vitals. Arrange medevac if STEMI is confirmed.

    Distinction-Level Answer (SBAR-M)

    Stabilize with ACS protocol, acquire and interpret 12-lead ECG, initiate dual antiplatelet therapy where indicated. Simultaneously begin an oxygen endurance audit against the 14-hour transit window. Notify the bridge using SBAR-M with a resource endurance and capability gap assessment. Document the capability gap: no cath lab, no troponin trend, no blood bank. Frame the medevac decision around whether onboard resources will outlast the clinical trajectory, not just current stability.

    Norovirus Outbreak

    Cruise Nurse

    "You receive 23 cases of acute gastroenteritis overnight on a 3,000-passenger cruise ship. As the duty nurse, how do you support the outbreak response?"

    Pass-Level Answer

    Isolate symptomatic passengers, increase sanitation, rehydrate affected individuals, notify the ship doctor and monitor the case count.

    Distinction-Level Answer (SBAR-M)

    Support activation of the vessel outbreak management plan. Assist with calculating the current attack rate against the 2% GI illness threshold. Establish an isolation log with cabin-level tracking and timed symptom documentation. Coordinate with housekeeping on enhanced sanitation protocols. Prepare IV fluid and antiemetic stock audit for the ship doctor. Support documentation for CDC VSP reporting. Communicate staffing impact to the medical team lead using structured handover: current caseload, resource status, projected demand over next 24-48 hours.

    Captain Disagreement

    Ship Doctor

    "You recommend a medevac for a deteriorating patient but the captain wants to continue to the scheduled port. How do you handle this?"

    Pass-Level Answer

    Explain the medical urgency, document the conversation and escalate to the company medical director if needed.

    Distinction-Level Answer (Command Language)

    Present the clinical trajectory in operational terms the bridge understands: ORS level, oxygen endurance window, resource depletion timeline and what will not be survivable if transfer is delayed. Frame it as a capability gap, not a disagreement. Document the recommendation in writing with the Capability Gap Speech: "Captain, I must formally advise that our onboard capability may not sustain this patient beyond [timeframe]. I am documenting this communication." If the captain declines, document that decision, contact the company medical director, and continue stabilisation while logging all interventions and reassessments.

    Platform Trauma

    Offshore Medic

    "A rigger sustains a crush injury to the lower limbs during a lifting operation on an offshore platform. Helicopter medevac is 4 hours away due to weather. What is your approach?"

    Pass-Level Answer

    Secure the scene, apply C-spine precautions, control haemorrhage, splint fractures, establish IV access, administer analgesia and request helicopter medevac.

    Distinction-Level Answer (SBAR-M)

    Coordinate with the OIM to confirm scene safety and secure the lifting operation. Perform a primary survey with C-ABCDE approach. Assess for crush syndrome risk: document entrapment duration, administer aggressive IV fluid resuscitation before extrication if prolonged entrapment. Apply tourniquet if uncontrolled haemorrhage. Monitor for hyperkalaemia indicators. Communicate to the OIM using SBAR-M: "OIM, this is a priority 1 casualty. Our medical resources can stabilise but not definitively manage crush syndrome. I am requesting immediate helicopter medevac. Current weather window closes at [time]." Audit analgesic and fluid stock against 4-hour hold time. Prepare transfer documentation and packaging for helicopter extraction.

    Medication Error at Sea

    Cruise Nurse

    "You discover that a crew member was given twice the prescribed dose of anticoagulant by a colleague on the previous shift. The patient is currently asymptomatic. What do you do?"

    Pass-Level Answer

    Inform the ship doctor immediately, assess the patient for signs of bleeding, document the error and complete an incident report.

    Distinction-Level Answer (SBAR-M)

    Immediately assess the patient: vital signs, signs of bleeding (bruising, haematuria, gum bleeding, altered consciousness). Notify the ship doctor using SBAR-M: "Doctor, Situation: crew member received double dose of [drug]. Background: administered at [time] by [colleague]. Assessment: currently asymptomatic, vitals stable, no visible bleeding. Recommendation: I suggest increased monitoring frequency, withholding next dose, and considering reversal agent availability." Document the error with timed entries. Complete the incident report per vessel protocol. Audit onboard supply of reversal agents. If the patient deteriorates, reassess the capability gap and consider telemedicine consultation. Support the colleague involved with a non-punitive debrief per just culture principles.

    Oxygen Exhaustion

    Offshore Medic

    "You are managing a casualty on high-flow oxygen on an offshore platform. You calculate that your oxygen supply will run out 6 hours before helicopter medevac can arrive due to weather delays. What do you do?"

    Pass-Level Answer

    Reduce flow rate where clinically safe, request priority medevac and prepare for potential clinical deterioration.

    Distinction-Level Answer (SBAR-M)

    Perform a formal oxygen burn-rate audit: current cylinder pressure, flow rate, litres remaining, and calculate the precise endurance window. Assess whether the FiO2 target can be reduced without compromising the clinical trajectory. Audit all platform oxygen sources including emergency cylinders. Communicate the depletion timeline to the OIM using SBAR-M: "OIM, at current consumption we will exhaust medical oxygen at approximately [time]. This is [X] hours before projected helicopter arrival. I am formally advising this is a capability gap." Document the gap. Request weather re-assessment and explore alternative transfer options. Prepare a contingency plan for clinical deterioration if oxygen is exhausted and document all decisions.

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    Question 1 of 8

    1. Which of these certifications do you currently hold?

    2. How many years of emergency or acute care clinical experience do you have?

    3. A patient develops chest pain at sea, 18 hours from port. What is your first operational consideration beyond clinical assessment?

    4. You need to request a course deviation for a medical emergency. How do you communicate this to the bridge?

    5. What does "capability gap" mean in maritime medicine?

    6. During a norovirus outbreak, at what threshold should you consider notifying port authorities?

    7. Can you independently perform: IV cannulation, ECG interpretation, wound closure and emergency drug administration?

    8. You are alone managing a critical patient overnight. What is your priority documentation?

    Interview-Ready

    You have strong certifications, solid clinical experience and demonstrate operational thinking suited to maritime medicine. You understand capability gaps, command communication and resource-constrained decision-making. You are well positioned for maritime medical interviews.

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    Build More Preparation

    You have a clinical foundation but need to develop maritime-specific readiness. Focus on obtaining key certifications (STCW, ACLS/ALS), building procedural confidence, and learning SBAR-M communication, oxygen endurance planning, capability gap documentation and command language before interviewing.

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    Start with Fundamentals

    Maritime medicine requires specific certifications, procedural skills and a different operating framework from hospital practice. Start by obtaining core certifications (STCW, ACLS/ALS), building acute care experience, and understanding how isolation, limited resources and command communication change clinical decision-making. The free Red-Zone Card is a good starting point.

    Start with the Free Red-Zone Card

    Your Maritime Medicine Readiness Checklist

    • Complete your primary qualification — Medical degree, nursing degree, or paramedic qualification with full registration in your country of practice.
    • Gain acute care experience — Aim for at least 2-3 years in emergency medicine, intensive care, acute medicine or trauma. This is non-negotiable for most maritime roles.
    • Obtain STCW certification — Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping. Required for all seafarers, including medical personnel. Includes sea survival, firefighting, first aid and personal safety.
    • Complete advanced life support — ACLS/ALS certification is a baseline requirement. ATLS, PHTLS or equivalent trauma certification adds significant value.
    • Get your medical fitness certificate — ENG1 (UK), PEME, or equivalent seafarer medical examination proving fitness for duty at sea.
    • Learn SBAR-M and command communication — Maritime medicine requires you to translate clinical risk into operational language that non-medical command teams understand.
    • Understand the capability gap framework — Learn to assess and communicate the point where your onboard resources can no longer sustain a patient's clinical trajectory.
    • Consider a Diploma in Maritime Medicine — Not always required, but demonstrates commitment and provides structured training in ship medicine.

    Free Red-Zone Card

    Start learning the operational language and clinical frameworks used in maritime medicine. Covers emergency protocols, communication templates and quick-reference tools.

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    Career Map

    Explore the five main career pathways in maritime medicine: ship doctor, ship nurse, offshore medic, expedition clinician and maritime public health officer.

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    Readiness Quiz

    Take the self-assessment quiz to evaluate your current readiness for maritime medicine and identify what you need to work on before applying.

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    Interview Preparation

    Practice with real maritime medical interview scenarios using SBAR-M structure and command language before you face the panel.

    Practice Interviews
    Before "I think the patient needs hospital."
    After "Captain, this is ORS Level 3. Our resources may not outlast the transit window."

    Learn how to translate clinical decisions into command language.

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    Interview Command Guide

    $29

    30+ interview scenarios with pass and distinction-level model answers, SBAR-M templates, command language phrases and scoring rubrics.

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    Complete Toolkit

    $99

    Everything in the Interview Command Guide plus clinical reference tools, emergency protocols, bridge phrase library, case simulations and lifetime updates.

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    Important Disclaimer The Ship Doctor does not represent employers, recruiters or cruise lines and does not guarantee job availability, interviews or employment. Job-search guidance is provided for educational and career navigation purposes only.

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