Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

Military Nursing Career Path Offers Many Opportunities to Learn, Serve

Image of Military nurse tends to patient. Air Force 1st Lt. Torri Easley, a clinical nurse, provides care to Vicki Beeler, a patient at INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Feb. 10, 2022. The U.S. Air Force medical team, working side-by-side with civilian medical professionals, has been deployed in support of continued Department of Defense COVID-19 response operations.

Each nurse has his or her own unique career path.

Air Force Col. Dianne Stroble recalls her original plans to serve in the reserve component. But after talking to a recruiter, she decided to accept a commission and enter the active duty force when she was 33 and married with three children.

"The stars aligned, and I had the support of my spouse and family,", said Stroble, who is now the director for education and training, and the deputy chief nursing officer at the Defense Health Agency.

"I felt called by a higher being to serve a purpose bigger than myself to serve and render care for a specific community," she recalled recently.

Like their civilian peers, all commissioned nurses across the military must have a bachelor's degree and an unrestricted nursing license. Yet military nurses have unique opportunities for additional training.

Specialized education and training is required above basic nursing to provide care for our military in deployed locations," Stroble said.

 “The education and scope of practice knowledge and skills requirements for each nursing specialty will differ slightly as well as the requirements for advanced practice nurses, clinical nurse specialists, and nurse scientists."

Some of the nursing specialties within the Military Health System include critical care, medical-surgical, family health, trauma, pediatrics, women's health, perioperative/surgical, disease manager, case manager, flight nurse and advanced practice nurse, among others.

Stoble's specialties are critical and emergency care. "Caring for critical care patients allows me to see how hard our body's physiological processes respond to treatment interventions and work to overcome illness or injury and return to an optimal state of health. I'm amazed at how far medicine has come and the lives that can be saved," she said.

The military medical community offers many professional advancement opportunities, which is a major draw for many service members in the career field.

"There is always another school to attend, course to take, or skill to be learned,” said Army Master Sgt. Matthew Maxwell, a chief nursing advisor and senior enlisted leader for J-3 Operations at the Defense Health Agency.

 “If you have the desire and dedication, you can gain numerous certifications that can advance your career both in and out of the military. You never stop learning," he said.

Stroble agreed.

"From lieutenant to general or flag officer, military nursing offers a plethora of leadership development opportunities at all ranks," Stroble said.

Stroble added that the military offers numerous incentives for nurses to join and remain in the military.

You also may be interested in...

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

U.S. Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Tanya Johnson, Defense Health Agency Senior Enlisted Leader, speaks at an event held at Defense Health Headquarters to honor nurses during National Nurses Week on May 10, 2024.

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Defense Health Agency Chief Nursing Officer Dr. Kristen Atterbury hosted an event at Defense Health Headquarters honoring nurses as a part of National Nurses Week, May 6–10, 2024. The event included special guest speakers, a blessing of the hands, cake cutting, and the announcement the winners of the DHA nursing awards.

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Defense Health Agency Chief Nursing Officer Dr. Kristen Atterbury hosted an event at Defense Health Headquarters honoring nurses as a part of National Nurses Week, May 6–10, 2024. The event included special guest speakers, a blessing of the hands, cake cutting, and the announcement the winners of the DHA nursing awards.

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

U.S. Army Nurse Corps officer COL Pamela Dipatrizio participates in National Nurses Week events at the Defense Health Agency each year dressed as Florence Nightingale, and sometimes exhibits historical nursing and medical artifacts that she has collected throughout her military career.

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

U.S. Air Force Col. Gwendolyn Foster, Director of Staff for the U.S. Air Force Surgeon General; Defense Health Agency Chief Nursing Officer Dr. Kristen Atterbury; U.S. Navy CAPT Alison Castro Deputy Corps Chief of the Navy Nurse Corps; and U.S. Army COL Jodelle Schroeder, Deputy Corps Chief of the U.S. Army Nurse Corps, cut the cake during a ...

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

U.S. Navy CAPT Paul Loesche, Defense Health Agency Deputy Chief Nursing Officer, DHA Chief Nursing Officer Dr. Kristen Atterbury, and U.S. Army COL Pamela Dipatrizio, took part in an event at the Defense Health Headquarters on May 10, 2024, celebrating National Nurses Week.

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

U.S. Army Nurse Corps officer COL Pamela Dipatrizio participates in National Nurses Week events at the Defense Health Agency each year dressed as Florence Nightingale, and sometimes exhibits historical nursing and medical artifacts that she has collected throughout her military career.

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Defense Health Agency Chief Nursing Officer Dr. Kristen Atterbury, Dr. Debbie Hatmaker, Chief Nursing Officer of the American Nurses Association, and U.S. Army COL Pamela Dipatrizio, took part in an event at the Defense Health Headquarters on May 10, 2024, celebrating National Nurses Week.

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

U.S. Army Chaplain MAJ Daniel Garnett, Defense Health Agency operations chaplain, gives the blessing of the hands, to all DHA medical personnel during an event honoring National Nurses Week on May 10, 2024, at Defense Health Headquarters.

Photo
Jun 10, 2024

Nurses Week 2024

Nurses Week 2024

U.S. Army COL Jodelle M. Schroeder, Deputy Corps Chief of the U.S. Army Nurse Corps and U.S. Army COL Pamela Dipatrizio, took part in an event at the Defense Health Headquarters on May 10, 2024, celebrating National Nurses Week.

Photo
May 9, 2023

Tidewater Market Celebrates Nurses Week

Tidewater Market Celebrates Nurses Week

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (May 9, 2023) Rear Adm. Matthew Case, director of the Defense Health Agency Tidewater Market and commander of Navy Medical Forces Atlantic, meets with chief nurses from DHA Tidewater Market military treatment facilities as part of National Nurses Week 2023. During the meeting, Case thanked the nurses for their role in helping provide ...

Photo
May 9, 2023

Tidewater Market Celebrates Nurses Week

Tidewater Market Celebrates Nurses Week

PORTSMOUTH, Va. (May 9, 2023) Rear Adm. Matthew Case, director of the Defense Health Agency Tidewater Market and commander of Navy Medical Forces Atlantic, meets with chief nurses from DHA Tidewater Market military treatment facilities as part of National Nurses Week 2023. During the meeting, Case thanked the nurses for their role in helping provide ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: September 06, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery