Nursing Leadership in Air Force Theater Hospitals: The Chief Nurse Requirement

Abstract

In 1987, the United States Air Force (USAF) had 119 medical treatment facilities (MTFs) -- 81 with inpatient capabilities. Today, the USAF has 74 MTFs with just 14 inpatient facilities world-wide. This 83% reduction of inpatient facilities during the past 20 years and the focus on outpatient care has produced fewer nursing leaders with the requisite knowledge, education, training, and experience required to lead theater hospital nursing operations. This is critical because the skills nurses need for deployment are honed in a hospital environment. The purpose of this paper is to justify the need to add a Colonel Chief Nurse (CN) requirement to the EMEDS manpower detail based on three underlying principles. First, USAF and civilian guidance require a CN to lead nursing operations. Second, the doctrine that drove EMEDS development has significantly changed over the past 10 years. The linear battlefield no longer exists, casualty flows have changed, and joint operations require theater hospitals to have consistent capabilities regardless of service-origin. Third, colonel CNs are authorized in all but one USAF hospital and are best prepared to lead nursing operations in theater hospitals. This paper offers an operationally-based, standards-driven justification for deploying the best-prepared nursing leaders to lead nursing operations in USAF theater hospitals. It concludes with a recommendation to add the CN requirement to the EMEDS unit type code along with additional recommendations on how to better administratively and operationally prepare CNs for deployment.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 14, 2008
Accession Number
ADA489240

Entities

People

  • Susan Jano

Organizations

  • Air War College

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Air Force Facilities
  • Command And Control
  • Contingency Operations (Military)
  • Employment
  • Health Care
  • Health Services
  • Hospitalizations
  • Hospitals
  • Medical Personnel
  • Military Hospitals
  • Military Science
  • Patient Care
  • Personnel Management
  • Surgery
  • Therapy
  • Warfare

Readers

  • Joint Military Operations and Doctrine.
  • Medical or Health Care Field.
  • Military History / Militaries and War Studies