Nurse heroes
run clinics for the poor, hold dying babies when no family members
can be with them and volunteer at health fairs and church clinics
despite their busy schedules.
And there are
nurse heroes-like Verdell Marsh, Ph.D., RN, CCRN-who are ready at
any moment to go where their country sends them.
"Being in
the Army Reserve means being able to serve my country and being there
when I'm really needed," said Marsh, a lieutenant colonel at
the Army Reserve 94th General Hospital in Seagoville, Texas, and a
staff nurse and educator at the VA North Texas Health Care System
in Dallas.
Marsh has served
in the Reserve for 24 years. She spends one weekend a month training
and two weeks a year at a military base in various parts of the country.
During Desert Storm, she was called up and sent to work in a hospital
in Germany.
In 1990, Marsh
received a call at 3 a.m. and was told she was on what the Army called
a "grazing herd alert." Then, at her training session that
weekend, she and her fellow reservists were told they were on a "rolling
bull"-they were being called to action.
Marsh did not
know what to expect or where she might be headed. "We weren't
sure if we were going to Saudi or if we were going to go somewhere
in Europe," she said. Her mother and sister cried as they helped
her get her things together. Marsh didn't worry for herself. She felt
she was prepared; this was what she had trained for.
"The thing
I thought about was that caring for young troops could be pretty emotional,
especially if they were young guys who had severe injuries,"
she said. She also had heard stories from nurses who served in the
Vietnam War who cared for people they knew wouldn't survive.
Fortunately,
in Germany, the only casualties she saw were minor-a few shrapnel
wounds. She spent a lot of time caring for family members. After the
war, many reservists she served with got out. They had never expected
to be called up, she said. Some had relationships that didn't survive
the strain or separation.
But Marsh decided
to stay in. She liked the education and training opportunities the
Army offered. She liked meeting people from around the country. Her
father and aunts had served in the military and she had thought about
joining the Army when she graduated from high school. After two years
of work in a VA hospital, inspired in part by the patients there,
she joined the Reserve.
"I just
think that it's been a really rewarding experience for me," she
said. Now, knowing that she might be called up at any time, Marsh
does not regret her decision. "I see a lot of people waving flags
and I feel really honored because I wear the uniform," she said.
"I think I feel more secure than people who haven't had this
training."
If anything,
she feels calmer this time because she's been through it. "It
could just be my coping mechanism. I feel like I'm prepared to go
if I need to go," Marsh said. "I'm more ready this time
than last time."