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U.S. Army

Nurse Corps

From the Angels of Bataan held as POWs for three years to nurses under bombardment at Anzio to young lieutenants treating catastrophic wounds in Vietnam to the 97% survival rate in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Army Nurse Corps has been the backbone of military healthcare for 123 years. They saved soldiers that civilian trauma centers would have lost.

World Wars — Nurses Under Fire 1917 – 1945
Vietnam to GWOT 1965 – Present
VIETNAM
EVAC · FIELD · MUST
Vietnam — The MUST Nurses
5,000 Nurses · 8 Died
5,000
Nurses Served in VN
MUST
Medical Unit Self-Trans
1LT
Sharon Lane · KIA
8
NURSES DIED
Approximately 5,000 Army nurses served in Vietnam — most of them young lieutenants in their twenties treating the most severe combat trauma of the war. They worked in evacuation hospitals and MUST (Medical Unit, Self-contained, Transportable) facilities that received casualties directly from Dustoff helicopters. First Lieutenant Sharon Lane was killed by enemy rocket fire at Chu Lai on June 8, 1969 — the only American military nurse killed by direct hostile fire in Vietnam. The emotional toll on Vietnam-era nurses, treating teenagers with catastrophic wounds, produced PTSD rates that weren't acknowledged for decades. Read more
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OIF / OEF
CSH · ROLE 3 · TRAUMA
GWOT — Combat Support Hospitals
The 97% Survival Rate Nurses
CSH
Combat Support Hospital
Role 3
Forward Surgical
ICU
Trauma · Burns · Neuro
97%
SURVIVAL RATE
Army nurses were central to the 97% survival rate in Iraq and Afghanistan — staffing combat support hospitals, forward surgical teams, and aeromedical evacuation flights around the clock. ANC officers managed ICUs, trauma bays, burn units, and neurological wards that treated the most devastating injuries of the IED war. They also treated thousands of injured civilians, including children. The clinical expertise of Army nurses under combat conditions is unmatched anywhere in healthcare. They saved soldiers that civilian trauma centers would have lost. Read more
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TODAY
MTFs WORLDWIDE
Modern Army Nurse Corps
Clinical Excellence · Leadership · Readiness
11,000+
Active ANC Officers
BSN
Minimum · Many MSN/DNP
CRNA
Nurse Practitioner · CNM
MTF
EVERY HOSPITAL
Today's Army Nurse Corps includes over 11,000 officers serving in military treatment facilities worldwide — from Walter Reed to deployed Role 3 hospitals. ANC officers serve as nurse practitioners, certified registered nurse anesthetists, certified nurse midwives, and clinical nurse specialists. Many hold master's and doctoral degrees. ANC officers command hospitals, lead medical brigades, and serve as the Chief of the Army Nurse Corps. From bedside care to enterprise leadership, the Nurse Corps remains the clinical backbone of military medicine. Read more
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123
Years of Service
11,000+
Active ANC Officers
97%
GWOT Survival Rate
Heal
Under Fire