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VA Rocky Mountain Network

 

Nurse supports Apache Nation during COVID peak

Dorothy Barrow

Dorothy Barrow, VA ECHCS RN, poses in front of a Wizard of Oz mural inside the Whiteriver Indian Hospital on the White Mountain Apache Reservation in Arizona where she deployed for six weeks in June 2020 to alleviate a peak period of COVID-19 cases there.

By Terri Rorke
Thursday, September 17, 2020

When Dorothy Barrow walked down the corridor of the Whiteriver Indian Hospital for the first time, it all made sense to her. From the warm greetings by staff, a colorful Wizard of Oz mural on the wall and her own ruby red clogs, Barrow felt right at home and ready to support the White Mountain Apache Reservation in Arizona during a peak period of COVID-19 cases there in June.

As a registered nurse with VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System (ECHCS), Barrow first signed up in 2019 as a Disaster Emergency Medical Personnel System (DEMPS) volunteer. Then when the coronavirus pandemic hit U.S. soil in early 2020, Barrow was ready to be called to support either another VA or non-VA facility in the community but had no idea where she’d end up.

Great Seal of the White Mountain Apache Tribe
Great Seal of the White Mountain Apache Tribe. Apaches “have been infected at more than 10 times the rate of people in the state as a whole,” according to an August 2020 New York Times article.

When the moment finally arrived, Barrow became the first ECHCS employee in approximately seven years to deploy through DEMPS. By June, ECHCS was already experiencing a downturn from its own peak of COVID-19 cases, making it a prime opportunity for Barrow to help the White Mountain Apache Tribe during such a critical time. Apaches “have been infected at more than 10 times the rate of people in the state as a whole,” according to an August New York Times article.

“It was an honor to be first,” Barrow said. “It was a humbling experience to be accepted into their cultural traditions while being helpful at the same time.”

Nicknamed ‘girl with the red shoes,’ Barrow found herself embraced by everyone she met during the extended six-week deployment as she helped relieve the strain on night-shift Family Care Unit staff challenged to attend to an unusually high number of patients. Beyond her regular nurse duties, sometimes Barrow was the second nurse needed to administer controlled medications. Other times—with the help of a translator—she’d listen to patients six feet away from their door as they talked about how isolation prevented them from participating in important traditions. As a community deeply rooted in cultural ceremonies and close-knit family ties, isolation has been particularly difficult for the White Mountain Apache Tribe to endure.

Fortunately as a key component of VA’s Fourth Mission to provide back-up health services to the nation in times of declared emergencies or disaster, the DEMPS program is a way for non-clinical and clinical VA staff, like Barrow, to serve areas of the country in need. Barrow worked with a fluctuating group of 15 to 16 other DEMPS volunteer nurses from VAs around the country, providing both Whiteriver Indian Hospital staff and patients with relief or an extra hand needed when minutes mattered most.

Dorothy Barrow and fellow night-shift Family Care Unit crew members at the Whiteriver Indian Hospital
Dorothy Barrow, VA ECHCS RN, along with fellow night-shift Family Care Unit crew members at the Whiteriver Indian Hospital during the first wave of her deployment in June 2020. Barrow worked with a fluctuating group of 15 to 16 other DEMPS (Disaster Emergency Medical Personnel System) volunteer nurses from VAs around the country, providing both Whiteriver Indian Hospital staff and patients with relief or an extra hand needed when minutes mattered most.

“The importance of the DEMPS program is that at some time in our lives, we all need help—even those who provide care to our Veterans,” said Demetrius Ortega, ECHCS’ DEMPS and Emergency Management Coordinator. “DEMPS provides us with the opportunity to serve not only other VA health care systems, but the community in general. The program is very gratifying to all those who serve and is vital to the VA, helping us complete the Fourth Mission.”

Barrow said the support she received from ECHCS leadership and Emergency Management meant everything to her so she could extend her time making a difference in Whiteriver where she left accomplishing her lifelong goal to one day serve populations most typically underserved in society: Veterans, those in prison systems and the Indian Health Service community.

Great Seal of the White Mountain Apache Tribe
Dorothy Barrow, with her "ruby red clogs."

“Everyone was so kind,” Barrow said while reflecting on her experience. “They didn’t want me to go and showered me with thank you’s.” One Whiteriver ER RN remarked the following about her time working with VA nurses: “We learned so much from each other. We shared a few heartbreaks and sadness as well … Thank you for coming to our rescue when we needed it the most. You were truly the best parts of the fight against COVID. Thank you for your friendship.”

Barrow said she especially misses listening to the Apache language being spoken but has made lifelong friends on her deployment who she hopes to meet one day again somewhere over the rainbow.

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