How did
you come to choose military nursing?
In 1972, I joined the Army Student Nurse Program. It was during
the Vietnam era and the program paid for the last two years of
school. I joined because I wanted to travel. After graduating,
I was committed to spend three years on active duty, but I absolutely
did not plan to spend my career in the military.
What happened
to redirect your career?
I did my three years and did my traveling. But I found out that
the military is a very professional environment. Many more nurses
have master's and Ph.D.-level preparation here, so it's a much
more professionally oriented group of practitioners. I liked what
I was doing and decided to stay with it. After 8½ years
on active duty, I joined the Army Reserve. I've had the chance
to do collaborative research with those I've worked with. Nursing
in the Army provides great educational opportunities.
As a reservist,
you've been called to active service and sent overseas twice.
What stands out about those episodes?
I was in Germany during Desert Storm, working as a nursing supervisor
at a primary evacuation hospital for those evacuated from Saudi
Arabia. I got to Landstuhl [on] Christmas Day. We were there before
the ground war started, and initially it was an interesting process.
I was in on all the planning to take care of patients evacuated
from Saudi Arabia. We were planning for a huge war; the casualty
estimates were enormous. The hospital went from 250 beds to 1,000
beds in one week. I was part of the planning and execution of
that. Our staff included people who had experience in mass casualties
from the air show at Ramstein Air Base the year before and surgeons
who had come from major U.S. trauma centers.
Then I was
in Bosnia for a longer deployment-eight months. I went in as commander
of a hospital. There was a change of commanders going on when
I was being deployed, and it was recommended I go in that role
to provide continuity.
I was the
first nurse and first woman to serve in the role of combat support
hospital commander. It was an all-encompassing position. I was
responsible for all the people under me and their families-about
450 people. Until then, I had been chief nurse and knew how to
be in charge of nursing care and staff. But as a commander I had
the responsibility to keep everyone safe.
Because of
the dangerous situation, everyone carried weapons. This was in
addition to all the other leadership responsibilities-creating
a good work environment, facilitating people's work situations,
providing resources for them to do their jobs. It was challenging.
I handled it by concentrating on what I knew I was good at. I
knew how to take care of patients and so I focused on things I
could do well.
How has
military service affected your family?
My husband has always been supportive. When I was deployed to
Germany, my children were 5 and 8 years old. My husband was always
involved in their care, and our neighbors were wonderful. But
it was hard. I was homesick. My work was so busy and challenging
and we worked every day, all day long. But I really missed my
family. When I went to Bosnia, my kids were teen-agers and more
self-sufficient, so it wasn't quite as hard.
Elaborate
on your role in the Army.
Right now, I'm in a different category of the Army Reserve as
an individual mobilization augmentee. I'm assigned as a reserve
person to an active-duty unit, which is the office of the Army's
Surgeon General. I represent the Army Reserve in all the decisions
made in all Army medical departments. I make sure the policies
we make fit all the reserves and that the soldiers and families
are taken care of as we deploy so many reservists right now. This
assignment is a four-year position, two of which I've already
completed.
It's a busy
job with lots of travel. The job is part time; I've woked 120
to 130 days per year for the past two years. Part of the time
I'm in Washington, D.C., and I visit reserve units and hospitals
all over the country.
What do
you foresee in your future with nursing and the military?
With the U.S. Army War College, military schooling and my Ph.D.,
I've been taking advantage of every leadership and educational
opportunity that I'm offered. In the next two years, I want to
contribute as much as I can in this position. I feel like I've
been offered so much that it's my turn to give back.