Episodes
Published 05/01/09
In the May 2009 issue of AJN, Kay E. Schwebke, MD, MPH, a staff physician at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis, authors an article about her interviews with nurses who served in the armed forces in Vietnam and the meaning of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial to these nurses. AJN Editor-in-Chief Diana Mason, PhD, RN, FAAN, talks with Dr. Schwebke about why she wrote the article and how her discussions with Vietnam nurses have changed how she practices and how she thinks about health...
Published 05/01/09
Mary O'Brien Tyrrell reads her poem, “Unseen.”
Published 05/01/09
Mary O'Brien Tyrrell reads her poem, “Unseen.”
Published 05/01/09
“I am a nurse before I am an officer.”
Published 05/01/09
Lynn Kohl reads her poem, “Deep Inside Me.”
Published 05/01/09
Lynn Kohl reads her poem, “Deep Inside Me.”
Published 05/01/09
Lynn Kohl reads her poem, “But I Was.”
Published 05/01/09
Lynn Kohl reads her poem, “But I Was.”
Published 05/01/09
Lynn Kohl has been on disability with posttraumatic stress disorder since 1982. “You were not there when your loved one died, but I was.”
Published 05/01/09
Lynn Kohl has been on disability with posttraumatic stress disorder since 1982. “You were not there when your loved one died, but I was.”
Published 05/01/09
Penny Kettlewell reads her poem, “I Hold Them.”
Published 05/01/09
Penny Kettlewell reads her poem, “I Hold Them.”
Published 05/01/09
Penny Kettlewell reads her poem, “Coffee Room Soldier.”
Published 05/01/09
Penny Kettlewell reads her poem, “Coffee Room Soldier.”
Published 05/01/09
Diane Carlson Evans reads her poem, “Black Man.”
Published 05/01/09
Diane Carlson Evans reads her poem, “Black Man.”
Published 05/01/09
“One of the worst memories of Vietnam was seeing children die. . . . Every time somebody died, I died with them.”
Published 05/01/09
“One of the worst memories of Vietnam was seeing children die. . . . Every time somebody died, I died with them.”
Published 05/01/09
Suzanne Constantini’s first patient was 21-year-old Steven, from Iowa. “I can close my eyes and I can see Steven as clear as day.”
Published 05/01/09
Suzanne Constantini’s first patient was 21-year-old Steven, from Iowa. “I can close my eyes and I can see Steven as clear as day.”
Published 05/01/09
“After that, I never looked at another ID card.”
Published 05/01/09
“After that, I never looked at another ID card.”
Published 05/01/09
“The next day, when one of the corpsmen went to get the children, they were all dead.”
Published 05/01/09