Hickok is the first uniformed service member to die of the coronavirus, in what Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper called a “stinging loss,” as the virus has infected a growing number of troops, from sailors on an aircraft carrier to soldiers assigned to garrisons in South Korea. His death came as a testament to his life, his family said. He served in numerous positions, including as a civilian physician assistant at Joint Base Andrews before he settled in Pennsylvania to work at a civilian orthopedic clinic in 2017.
But coronavirus cases exploded in both parts of his life, launching Hickok into action.
They rose in New Jersey — where he raised his children and drilled as a guardsman — and in the military, as the Pentagon has sought more medical specialists in uniform.
“My brother didn’t run away from this virus,” Mary Hickok-Scott, his younger sister, told Stars and Stripes. “He could have. He could have said, ‘I’m out.’ But he didn’t. He ran toward it.”
Hickok won praise for his “compassionate and professional care,” inspiring respect from his soldiers and superiors alike, said Col. Edwin Wymer, commander of the New Jersey Army National Guard Medical Command.
The family’s military legacy will continue. Hickok’s son Noah will finish his final semester at Rutgers University with plans to enter the Navy through officer candidate school, Stars and Stripes reported. That is a small solace for a family that, like many others, had no opportunity to say goodbye in the hospital room, Shandrea Hickok told a Pennsylvania PBS station.
“It almost, in a sense, feels like it didn’t happen,” she said.
But coronavirus cases exploded in both parts of his life, launching Hickok into action.
They rose in New Jersey — where he raised his children and drilled as a guardsman — and in the military, as the Pentagon has sought more medical specialists in uniform.
“My brother didn’t run away from this virus,” Mary Hickok-Scott, his younger sister, told Stars and Stripes. “He could have. He could have said, ‘I’m out.’ But he didn’t. He ran toward it.”
Hickok won praise for his “compassionate and professional care,” inspiring respect from his soldiers and superiors alike, said Col. Edwin Wymer, commander of the New Jersey Army National Guard Medical Command.
The family’s military legacy will continue. Hickok’s son Noah will finish his final semester at Rutgers University with plans to enter the Navy through officer candidate school, Stars and Stripes reported. That is a small solace for a family that, like many others, had no opportunity to say goodbye in the hospital room, Shandrea Hickok told a Pennsylvania PBS station.
“It almost, in a sense, feels like it didn’t happen,” she said.
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