Combat Nurses in Vietnam Whats an angel doin
Combat Nurses in Vietnam: What’s an angel doin’ here in hell? Sheon Montgomery Assistant Archivist, The Vietnam Archive November 7, 2012
The Vietnam Center and Archive Female Military Personnel in Vietnam § 8, 000 -10, 000 military women served In Country § Support positions – 10%, 1962 -1973 § Military Nurses – 1956 -1973 90% of women who served in Vietnam 5, 000+ Army nurses served 3, 000+ nurses, other branches § 1960’s – nursing still traditional woman’s role In US only 1% male nurses / in VN <30%
The Vietnam Center and Archive Operation Nightingale: Recruiting US Army Nurses
The Vietnam Center and Archive Female Nursing Personnel in Vietnam § Vast majority were Combat Nurses § Physical Therapists (43 total / 33 women) § Dieticians (26 total / 20 women)
The Vietnam Center and Archive Typical Female U. S. Army Combat Nurse Average 23. 6 Volunteer Higher education Straight from nursing school Little professional experience Learned “on the job” Officer Basic Training for Medical Field Services No combat training / No weapons Officer – entered as Lieutenant
The Vietnam Center and Archive Military Nursing Environment Fixed Medical Installations (in 1968, 5, 283 hospital beds in country) Surgical Hospitals Field Hospitals Evacuation Hospitals Convalescent Center (3, 000 beds) Hospital Ships (USS Repose & USS Sanctuary) Medical Support Network Centralized blood bank Medical logistical support Medical laboratories Air ambulance units
The Vietnam Center and Archive System of Phased Treatment 1. Medic – in the field 2. Medevac to nearest hospital triage & emergency treatment died / expectant stabilized 3. Evacuate to Rear Hospital Medical Ship (USS Sanctuary or Repose) Japan or Philippines United States And Free World Military Hospitals Vietnam, 1968
The Vietnam Center and Archive Dustoff / Medevac Created New Situation For Nurses Quick response saved more lives Brought trauma and burns straight from the field. . . Including those who would have died in the field – “Expectant” “After awhile in Vietnam, I guess I wasn’t so young anymore. I was seeing things, doing things that I never imagined could happen to anyone. I had to do a lot of things on my own, making snap decisions that could end up saving someone or costing him his life. ” -- Jacqueline Navarra Rhoads, 1970 -71
The Vietnam Center and Archive New Kind of War. . . New Kinds of Trauma Even nurses with trauma experience were unprepared (most nurses had less than 6 months of experience) Small arms fire and anti-personnel mines • massive, multiple injuries • traumatic and multiple amputations • huge and multiple blast wounds Napalm & white phosphorus burns • burn flesh down to the bones • burn wards particularly gruesome “… nurses were essentially doctors’ handmaidens. We were the most inexperienced group of medical personnel ever to serve in war time. ” -- Jeanne Diebolt Former USAF Nurse, Vietnam
The Vietnam Center and Archive Combat Nurses were expected to be all things. . 24/7 “You have to remember these were healthy guys. . . So put on some perfume, lipstick and a smile --Helen White Nurse I knew he was expectant. . . Doctor My feeling was that one of Girlfriend Mother Counselor the worst things that can happen to anybody is dying alone. . . he shouldn’t die alone. -- Lorraine Boudreau 1965 -66, 1969 -70
The Vietnam Center and Archive Combat Nurses • • worked 12+ hour shifts / 6 days a week on call 24 / 7 for times of high casualties often went back after hours to help out often rudimentary “hootches” and latrines often under rocket or sapper attack at night saw friends among the wounded constant stress – numb to situation to do jobs 12 -month rotation – always knew their last day
The Vietnam Center and Archive MEDCAP – Medical Services for Civilians
The Vietnam Center and Archive Conflicts Within Themselves Conflicts between vision of themselves and what they did • sheer enormity of nursing war casualties • making decisions about life/death, priorities • paperwork for dead • using weapons to defend self and wounded in care Conflicts between nursing mission and having to provide medical services for enemy prisoners • sometimes came in with the Americans they wounded/killed
The Vietnam Center and Archive 8 Female Military Casualties – All Nurses Ø 2 LT Carol Ann Drazba, 22 – helicopter crash (1966) Ø 2 LT Elizabeth Ann Jones, 22 – helicopter crash (1966) ØCPT Eleanor Grace Alexander, 27 – a/c crash (1967) Ø 1 LT Hedwig Diane Orlowski, 23 – a/c crash (1967) Ø 2 LT Pamela Donovan, 26 – illness (1968) ØLt Col Annie Ruth Graham, 52 – stroke (1968) Ø 1 LT Sharon Ann Lane, 25 –shrapnel wounds, KIA (1969) ØCPT Mary Therese Klinker – Opn Babylift a/c crash (1975)
The Vietnam Center and Archive
The Vietnam Center and Archive Stages of Returning Home 1) Isolation / Denial 2) Struggle for Recognition 3) Results
The Vietnam Center and Archive Returning Home Stage 1: Isolation / Silence
The Vietnam Center and Archive Multiple Difficulties Returning Home • post-war adjustment problems • insensitivity / lack of interest • sense that women were not “true” veterans • professional / occupational challenges • VA services inadequate for women
The Vietnam Center and Archive Post-War Adjustment Problems • expected to forget and go on as before • symptoms of PTSD Anger / Guilt / Depression / Withdrawal / Drug & Alcohol Dependency • “mysterious” physical ailments • trouble maintaining relationships • occupation / professional difficulties • disillusioned “I learned fast not to mention it. ” Even more than the men, the women retreated deep into silence. --Penny Burwell
The Vietnam Center and Archive Occupation / Professional Difficulties • In Vietnam they had performed as a team beyond accepted duties of nurses in the U. S. - making decisions - performing procedures • Not allowed in the U. S. hospitals, many either. . . - quit nursing - additional medical-related education - went back into the military
The Vietnam Center and Archive Lack of VA Services for Women • No private areas for women patients • VA Medical staff not trained in women’s health issues • Lack of recognition that Combat Nurses had seen their own type of combat • Myth: women not exposed to Agent Orange - symptoms all in their heads - why so many miscarriages & birth defects?
The Vietnam Center and Archive Early 1980’s-mid 1990’s Stage 2: Struggle for Recognition
The Vietnam Center and Archive Vietnam Male Veterans Getting Recognition Women excluded from veteran surveys & studies 1980 - PTSD diagnosis re-instated 1981 – Congress granted federally funded medical care for veterans who can prove direct exposure to Agent Orange 1982 - Vietnam Memorial (The Wall) dedicated
The Vietnam Center and Archive Vietnam Memorial – A Touchstone • Includes the names of 8 women nurses • Women veterans drawn to it, too – Service acknowledged by male veterans • Finding comfort • Society’s recognition • Opened up barriers within the women
The Vietnam Center and Archive Women’s Veteran Advocacy Begins Reaching out; Acknowledging their experiences Women’s Veteran Associations Newsletters and Support Groups Health Research VA to provide improved services to women veterans facilities / treatment / attitude
The Vietnam Center and Archive Stage 3: Results
The Vietnam Center and Archive 1988 – National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study Concluded women veterans had PTSD Particularly high for those in combat theaters High incidence of associated disorders generalized anxiety disorder depression occupational instability substance abuse non-specific distress flashbacks and panic disorder marital and relationship problems
The Vietnam Center and Archive Agent Orange Women Veterans included in AO Lawsuit Survey of women veterans – found Vietnam veterans: • Higher percentage of gynecological problems • Twice the percentage of cancers • Three times the percentage of birth defects • Twice the percentage of a child dying in 1 st year 1991 – Permanent disability benefits allowed to Vietnam Veterans exposed to Agent Orange
The Vietnam Center and Archive Vietnam Women’s Memorial Project • Incorporated in 1984 • Promote recognition and healing of Vietnam women veterans, particularly the Combat Nurses • Placement of memorial on the grounds of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D. C. near The Three Servicemen Statue (dedicated 1984)
The Vietnam Center and Archive Vietnam Women’s Memorial Project Commission of Fine Arts rejected addition • Diminish overall impact • Unnecessary “none bore the brunt of battle more than the infantrymen who fought in the jungle; thus they were chosen to represent all” --Letter on Decision from The Commission of Fine Arts I asked the students what they thought was the toughest job in Vietnam. . . I told them I thought it was being a nurse. --Letter from Vietnam Veteran Joe Muharsky
The Vietnam Center and Archive Vietnam Women’s Memorial - 1993
The Vietnam Center and Archive Women Vietnam Veterans Have Made a Difference
The Vietnam Center and Archive Women Military Veterans Today • 1. 8 million in the U. S. today (8%) • Women Veterans Health Program, est. 1988 • VA Center for Women Veterans website • Women Veterans Program Manager in each VA Medical Center
The Vietnam Center and Archive American Women Veterans Foundation http: //americanwomenveterans. org/home/ Current Programs § awareness § advocacy § resources § childcare § employment § education § business § housing Future Programs § outdoor retreats § education § transitional housing
The Vietnam Center and Archive Since 2000, Legislation passed specifically to benefit Women Veterans • Service connected mastectomy • Broader benefits for children with birth defects born to Vietnam Veteran mothers • Military Sexual Trauma counseling and treatment (20%) • Women Veterans Business Training Resource Program • Contract for study on barriers to health care • Pilot program for Readjustment Counseling in retreats • Pilot program on feasibility for offering child care
Selected Sources Jacobs, Marianne Scherer. The Best of Times, The Worst of Times: The Vietnam Experiences of and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Among Female Nurse Veterans. Dissertation: University of Washington. 1990. Lintecum, Sarge. Lyrics of Sister Soldier. Vuic, Kara Dixon. Officer, Nurse, Woman: The Army Nurse Corps in the Vietnam War. The Johns Hopkins University Press: Baltimore, Maryland. 2010. Walker, Keith. A Piece of My Heart: The Stories of Twenty-Six American Women Who Served in Vietnam. Presidio Press: Novato, California. 1985. http: //www. vietnam. ttu. edu/virtualarchive/ - Virtual Vietnam Archive http: //www. va. gov/womenvet/ - US Dept of Veterans Affairs, Women Veterans http: //www. whitman. edu/content/news/Women. War. Veterans - Forgotten Veterans: U. S. Women in Vietnam http: //www. war-veterans. org/Angels. htm - Touched By An Angel http: //www. vietnamwomensmemorial. org/ - Vietnam Women’s Memorial Foundation
Q&A Sister Soldier, Sister Soldier
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