Branching out and building up
DPT student helps build a temporary hospital for 3,000 COVID-19 patients at Chicago's McCormick Place Convention Center
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Cassandra Hall (’23 DPT) keeps track of each day’s tasks on Excel spreadsheets. Her closet is organized by color.
So she was not fazed by her National Guard assignment to an 80-person team that transformed McCormick Place Convention Center into a temporary hospital for 3,000 Covid-19 patients.
“It was definitely right up my alley,” says Hall, who was recently promoted from airman first class to senior airman in the Air National Guard.
Hall’s experience helping her father build houses proved useful as Guard members unloaded, unboxed and assembled furniture, including 3,000 chairs and 2,500 beds—some carried upstairs by hand because of building requirements. They placed beds, mattresses, chairs, pillows, trash cans and personal hygiene kits in each section.
They completed one section, then redid it after orders changed. They worked 17-hour days, but they met their deadlines.
Then they were told to take it down.
“We prepared for a worst-case scenario—3,000 people surpassing hospital capacity. Thank goodness we didn’t need to use it,” Hall says.
After her McCormick Center assignment, she was sent to MetroSouth Medical Center in Blue Island to help convert the hospital, which closed last fall, into a 585-bed facility for coronavirus patients. Her deployment, which began April 5, was extended four times—she finally returned home July 15. To protect from the virus, she was confined to hotel and workplace, bringing meals upstairs to dine alone, taking final exams on her laptop and seeing her family on video chat.
The whole experience was intense—but rewarding.
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“I learned a ton about how to manage personnel and disseminate information from multiple sources effectively. I also learned the value of hard work, long hours, and effective leadership by seeing the effort and expertise required to manage such a large mission,” she says.
“My experiences will allow me to better recognize when to step up and take charge of a situation, as well as how to communicate effectively in a stressful and at times confusing environment. These are all skills that will help me to be successful in physical therapy school as well as be a successful physical therapist in the future.”
Hall joined the National Guard in 2017 “for the education benefits, and also to do something no one else in my family had done.” Her husband, Matthew, who is in the Army National Guard after active-duty service, steered her to the Air National Guard.
She trained in Texas and Mississippi before her assignment with the 126th Force Support Squadron at Scott Air Force Base near Belleville, where she usually spends one weekend a month as a personnel specialist.
She was completing her bachelor’s in biology at Eastern Illinois University when the pandemic rolled in. Her classes went online and her other two part-time jobs—at Lake Land College bookstore and Steak ’n Shake—went away. So she volunteered for the Chicago assignment, figuring it would be an interesting change from her hometown of Neoga, population 1,500, “no stoplights, one four-way stop.”
“I wasn’t doing anything other than homework,” she says.
“I knew I could manage my school work, as well as any tasks they threw at me. And I could make a difference by helping out.”
Originally, Hall expected to apply to the physical therapy program at Northern Illinois University, “because it’s more of a home-like feel with all the corn and less city life.”
But when she visited UIC last spring, she was surprised to find it was a good fit.
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It just felt like a change of pace from my hometown was more suitable for where I am in my life. I’ve grown since I joined the military. I’m ready to continue to branch out and get a little out of my comfort zone.
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Her guard enlistment ends in 2023, the year she also expects to earn her DPT. After graduation, she’d like to work at a facility that treats veterans.
Until then, she’ll travel downstate one weekend a month for Guard drill.
“Being in the military has taught me to be flexible, to learn to adapt,” she says.
“Graduate school will take more work, but I’m dedicated to my end goal.”