

I mean you can also work for your local hospital system, too, but sure those are all options, though you may find getting hired by them to be a bit difficult at first because your resume won’t have tons of experience on it yet.
Keeping data secure, especially in the medical field overall, is paramount, so the IT-medical field does have a certain level of job security to it but I’d personally find it boring. I get why it’s appealing on the surface however I’d recommended the MSP (managed service provider) space as a good career starting point because you’d get exposed to a fairly wide variety of industries and my logic was that you’d refine what you like about INFOSEC in the first year or 2 of working at the MSP while serving a wider audience’s security needs and once you know what sub-specialty you’re really into then go chase the bigger companies with a bit of experience “on paper”.
That’s just my $.02. :)
I mean it looks like they didn’t promote him, he’s older and it’s still lieutenant, I’d be pissed too lol