Terri Yost, a University of Virginia assistant professor of nursing and a retired Army officer with 20 years of service, once joined an effort to find and return the remains of missing service members lost on foreign battlefields.
The work is often tedious – sifting dirt for bone fragments – and takes place in some of the world’s most remote and inhospitable places. But, she said, it is rewarding to play a small part in an effort to provide families closure.
Ahead of Memorial Day, UVA Today asked Yost about the mission she joined to help identify the missing.
Q. What made you interested in military service?
A. Military careers are often a family affair. My grandfather and several great uncles fought in WWII. My father served in Korea and I have an uncle who was a Navy Seabee in Vietnam. Even my older sister was commissioned as an Army officer after completing her college degree.
When I first began working as a nurse in 1993, almost all of the male patients that I cared for were veterans of WWII. To engage them in something that didn’t involve bloodwork, X-rays or hospital gowns, I would ask them to tell me stories about their military life and experience. They could talk about their war experiences with such detail, you would have thought that it had just happened last week. I absolutely loved caring for my “old soldiers.”


