American hospitals have lost 27 medical workers to the coronavirus. Here are some of their stories.

American hospitals have lost 27 medical workers to the coronavirus. Here are some of their stories.

  • Post author:
  • Post category:Uncategorized
  • Post comments:0 Comments

Douglas Linn Hickok, 57, a physician assistant and New Jersey National Guardsman, became the first US military service member to die from the coronavirus

Douglas Hickok

Hickok “served family, country, and faith,” his sister Mary said.

Family of Douglas Hickok.


Army Captain Douglas Linn Hickok, a physician assistant and New Jersey National Guardsman, became the first US military service member to die from the coronavirus when he passed away on March 28 at the age of 57 at Lehigh Valley Hospital-Poconos in Pennsylvania.

Born January 15, 1963, at Oklahoma’s Norman Air Force Base, Hickok was a third-generation service member who served as a captain in the National Guard Medical Unit in Seagirt, New Jersey. He graduated from US International University in California with a Bachelor of Arts in International Relations and Diplomacy, and then went on to Cornell Medical School in New York City, where he attained a physician assistant medical degree.

“Capt. Hickok provided compassionate and professional care to the Soldiers of the New Jersey Army National Guard while assigned to the Medical Command,” Col. Edwin Wymer, commander, New Jersey Army National Guard Medical Command, wrote in an emailed statement to BI. “Hickok was highly praised by subordinates and Senior Officers alike for his dedication and service to the Citizen-Soldiers of New Jersey.”

After serving in New Jersey, Hickok moved to Maryland in 2009 to work as a civilian physician assistant at Andrew’s Air Force Base and then to Pennsylvania in 2017 where he worked as an orthopedic physician assistant at a clinic, according to his family. 

“He was my hero,” Mary Scott-Peavler, Hickok’s younger sister, told BI. “He never gave up, never ran from things, and was not afraid of anything.”

“He served people. He served family, country, and faith,” Scott-Peavler said. “That sums up my brother.”

Hickok’s daughter, Shandrea, described her father as a caring person who was devoted to spending time with her and her brother Noah.

“My best memories of my father are the many trips he took my brother and me on,” she told BI in an email. “He loved to go outside and take us to parks, museums, battleships, military bases, movie theaters, beaches, and restaurants.”

His hobbies included cooking, hiking, baseball, and scouting. As a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Hickok also served a church mission in Spain for two years in the 1980s and spoke fluent Spanish.

A few weeks before his passing, Hickok and his daughter went on a spontaneous trip to the Sandy Hook Proving Ground in New Jersey, where Shandrea said her father excitedly took in the old canons, beautiful scenery, and wildlife on the grounds.

“This memory really encompasses my father’s zest for life and sense of wonder for the outdoors,” she said. 

Leave a Reply