Ever since grade school, Paulette Schank wanted to become a nurse.
That desire to help others drove her to first become a licensed practical nurse right after high school and later join the Air Force to become a flight nurse β eventually achieving the rank of colonel. Now she is stretching her wings even further at ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄βs College of Nursing to attain additional education so she can help expand a school in Haiti to teach advance nursing techniques.
βNursing is the richest, most rewarding field that anyone could ever work in,β says Schank. βYou connect with people every day.β

Her lifelong commitment to serving others has resulted in an impactful list of selfless deeds β so much so that she has been chronicled by CBS Newsβ 60 Minutes and Friday was recognized as a βHistory Makerβ by U.S. Rep. Darren Soto in Kissimmee.
Schank earned her bachelorβs degree at LaSalle University and her masterβs at Temple University, both in Philadelphia, where she moved back to after retiring from the military in 2014. She started classes at ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ last fall, while also working as a nurse anesthetist at Osceola Regional Medical Center in Kissimmee.
The daughter of a navy chief petty officer, she served in the Air Force 24 years, often in war zones. During her final five years in the Air Force she was commander of the 514th Aerospace Medicine Squadron at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New Jersey, where she was responsible for the medical support of more than 2,600 personnel. Through the years serving domestically and around the world she gained extensive nursing experience as a clinical nurse specialist in critical care, a certified registered nurse anesthetist, and certified family nurse practitioner.
In addition, she has participated in numerous humanitarian medical missions, providing medical care to earthquake victims in Haiti, American embassy bombing victims in Tanzania, Africa, and underserved communities of Peru, Honduras, Haiti and elsewhere.
Volunteerism has always been a part of her life, she says.
βAt the age of 14, I was a Red Cross volunteer working in an emergency room and today I continue to volunteer each year on mission trips,β she says. βMy next medical mission is June in Peru.β
Her new goal to help expand the school in Haiti led her to move to Orlando and attend ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄, she says, because the university is one of the few places that offers the three programs in one place that she sought: nurse practitioner, nurse educator and doctor of nursing practice.
The Haitian school already offers a bachelorβs in science for nursing, but Schank wants to help expand it by offering a program in masterβs-level nursing.
βThe goal is to teach advance-practice nurses in Haiti, which is a country in such need of medical care,β Schank says. βThis impact would be more than just a mission trip.β
Schankβs outlook on nursing has been chronicled by CBS News correspondent Scott Pelley. She was the subject of one of Pelleyβs 60 Minutes stories and the focus of a chapter on βSelflessnessββ in his book, Truths Worth Telling.

After Rick Brunson β84, an associate instructor in the Nicholson School of Communication and Media, read the book last year, he had a chance encounter with Schank at a birthday party and asked her to speak about her career to his principles of journalism class in October. Through Schank, Brunson sought to also have Pelley address his class via Skype, but the correspondent did one better Ββ he visited the class while he was in Orlando for a speaking engagement.
βPaulette saved countless lives of military servicemen and women, as well as civilians, as a field hospital surgical nurse during the Iraq war,β Brunson says. βPelleyβs [60 Minutes] story shows her giving blood from her own arm when the field hospital ran out of units and a soldier blown up by an IED came in and needed blood to survive. Thanks to her, he did.β
Schank said the discussion during class that night evolved into the importance of connecting with others.
To commemorate Womenβs History Month, Soto of Floridaβs 9th District read a bio of Schank on the floor of Congress last week, and at 6 p.m. Friday she was honored during a ceremony in his office.
βShe has dedicated her life to caring for others, be it in Florida or around the world,β Soto says.
In her personal time, Schank says she likes to kayak and play piano. But never far from her thoughts is her goal for Haiti.
βThereβs so many parts of that puzzle, but theyβll all be fixed,β she says. βWhen you talk about things and share your dreams with others, someone is always there to help with a solution.β