Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather, Royal Australian Air Force
By Anzac Square Memorial Galleries | 12 February 2026
The Australian Defence Force (ADF) currently has over 32,000 active reservists, representing 33% of the total ADF workforce. The ADF Reserve force contributes to operational capability both domestically and offshore while also offsetting workforce shortages in specialist roles. Reservists come from all walks of life and are trained to serve in a military capacity if and when Australia should need them. Despite the critical role that reservists play to ensure the ongoing security and interests of our nation, their contributions are often overlooked. This Anzac Day we explore the service of Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather, a specialist reservist with the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF).

Lynette Eather during 2019 interview, State Library of Queensland. Record no 99183631719702061.
Lynette always considered herself a ‘caring person’ and from a young age desired a career that would allow her to put this trait into practice. Born in Toowoomba, on a small property, she completed her schooling at St Ursula’s College and Downlands College, describing it as ‘great schooling, loved it’. After school she pursued nursing, specialising in perioperative nursing, supporting patient care before, during and after surgical procedures. When reflecting on her career she acknowledges; ‘I'm pleased I picked nursing. Loved it, and still love every day I’m at it.’
Lynette began her career at Saint Vincent’s Private Hospital in Toowoomba. Following her marriage, she moved to the Gold Coast working at John Flynn Private Hospital in Tugun. Years later, seeking to challenge herself, she joined the RAAF as a specialist reservist, explaining;
‘I probably always wanted to go into Defence, but then bringing up my own family didn’t really allow me to at the time, so when the children were a little older I decided to go off and put what I know best into practice, outside the hospital situation.’
Specialist reservists, such as Lynette, are military personnel with specific professional skills, who bring expertise, training and experience from their civilian career. Due to workplace shortages the ADF actively recruits specific occupations, such as lawyers, IT specialists, tradespersons and medical professionals, to help bolster capabilities. There are currently more than 600 nurses in the ADF, with reservists accounting for half of this total number.

Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather in Australian Air Force Uniform, Lynette Eather Digital Story, 2019, State Library of Queensland. Record no 99183631719702061.
Lynette’s civilian experience in the medical system prepared her well for her service with No. 1 Expeditionary Health Squadron (1EHS) at RAAF Base Amberley. This unit delivers deployable aerospace health support to the RAAF and ADF for sustained operations or short-notice contingency deployments. Its capabilities include primary health and emergency departments, surgery, intensive care, dental, environmental health, general wards, pathology, medical imaging, logistics and a deployable health facility command and control element. The squadron is trained to provide lifesaving medical support in deployed environments, including while under fire.
In 2003, Lynette served as a Flight Lieutenant with the Australian Specialist Health Group (ASHG) at the NATO Role 3 Multinational Medical Unit in Afghanistan.
‘There was a- a call from my commanding officer, whether I would partake in going [to] a deployment to Afghanistan. I thought, "Wow, can I do this? Yes, I can, I have very good support from my unit, a lot of training and preparation for it."’
NATO Role 3 was a world class trauma hospital staffed by dedicated medical professionals from Australia, American, Canda, Netherlands, Denmark, Britian and New Zealand. The hospital was responsible for providing medical care for more than 15,000 soldiers and civilian workers at Kandahar Airfield, as well as the tens of thousands of additional coalition soldiers stationed throughout Afghanistan. They treated a range of conditions from the common cold to severe traumatic blast injuries caused by improvised explosive devices (also known as IEDs). United States Navy Doctor Captain Michael McCarten, commander of the hospital in 2010 argued; ‘There’s essentially nothing that can come in here that we can’t handle’.

Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather at NATO Role 3 at Kandahar, Afghanistan, Lynette Eather Digital Story, 2019, State Library of Queensland. Record no 99183631719702061.
Military personnel stationed at NATO Role 3 faced constant danger, with the base often under threat from indirect fire and insurgent attacks. This is reflected in Lynette’s first memories of Kandahar;
‘You land down, and we had our weapons on and very heavily loaded, I suppose, and you thought, "Oh, this is for real." So the plane had landed, the security was everywhere, you're running off the airstrip because there could be- you could be on watch, and you're in a dangerous place. So I knew that I... was in [a] war zone then. And seeing the wire all the way around, and alarms going off, and sirens, you never forget the sirens, the sound of the sirens.’

Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather at NATO Role 3 at Kandahar, Afghanistan, State Library of Queensland. Record no 99183631719702061.
The sounds of sirens became a daily occurrence for Lynette, creating an environment of hypervigilance;
‘I was walking to the hospital on my third day after arriving in Kandahar, and I heard a big bang, and I thought, "Oh, no." Well, being trained, dropped to the ground, facing the dirt, hands over the head, count for two minutes, and then run for a bomb shelter. So I was doing that, and I was very nervous, and I ran into some American soldiers in the bomb shelter. Stayed there for a couple of hours until we had the all-clear, and then I could move on to the hospital. That terrified me but... I guess after that, it was happening two, three times a day and you kind of got used to it, I guess, just working on adrenaline the whole time.’

Alert message issued at NATO Role 3 at Kandahar, Afghanistan, Lynette Eather Digital Story, 2019, State Library of Queensland. Record no 99183631719702061.
While stationed at Kandahar Lynette was part of a team of nine Australian medical professionals including a surgeon, anaesthetist, nurses and theatre staff. Unsurprisingly, during her five and half month deployment she formed a ‘very, very close’ relationship with her colleagues and was grateful that they ‘united as a group and worked really well together’. The team often treated patients with extensive traumatic injuries, with Lynette recalling one case;
‘There was a beautiful young American soldier that came in, and he'd lost- he'd lost one leg, and he was very, very sick, but we managed to operate on him, stabilise him and then fly him out. And I got a beautiful photo that he sent me of he and his wife, and she was pregnant. So he went back to rehab, had a prosthetic leg put on, and doing really, really well. So it was great to see that photo of him and his wife, and a bub on the way.’

Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather and medical staff stationed at NATO Role 3 at Kandahar, Afghanistan, Lynette Eather Digital Story, 2019, State Library of Queensland. Record no 99183631719702061.
Lynette felt that her deployment to Afghanistan, while challenging, had been immensely worthwhile;
‘It's probably now, when you reflect back you- you feel sad for the soldiers, and you wonder how they're getting on, and the local people. I guess it does have a bit of an effect on you, but the positive of that is I know I've done some good out there, and I've helped people, and if I could do it all again I would. So I think mentally for me, it's been a really good thing.’
In 2012 Lynette was involved in another overseas operation, this time serving on the 1,000-bed hospital ship USNS Mercy that delivers free medical, dental, veterinary and engineering aid to Indonesia, Philippines, Vietnam and Cambodia. The Mercy was part of the Pacific Partnership, an annual U.S. Pacific Fleet-sponsored training mission to draw together partner nations to respond to natural disasters. Since 2006 Australia has contributed ADF personnel each year to demonstrate a willingness to support peace, stability and humanitarian work.

Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather speaks into the hearing amplifier just given to Siiha whose hearing has now improved, Courtesy Williams Sound.
During this deployment Lynette met Lorn Siiha a 27-year-old Cambodian man who had been born with practically no hearing and communicated via sign language. Lynette and another ADF nurse brought Siiha’s plight to the attention of US Navy doctors on the Mercy. Siiha was brought aboard and tested, with doctors determining that he had severe hearing loss in one ear and mild to profound hearing loss in the other. Audiologists were then able to fit him with a personal amplifier, improving his hearing and situational awareness. This was a lifechanging moment for Siiha, who began learning to speak for the first time. Similarly, Lynette will never forget her experiences during the Pacific Partnership;
‘It’s the best thing I have ever done, it’s so rewarding and it’s a chance to work at sea with a diverse range of people and specialities. Our surgeons have performed many surgeries that have changed the quality of people’s lives.’
Outside of her role as a specialist reservist Lynette plays an active role in her community, volunteering as a lifeguard and first aid officer at the Tugun lifesaving club. In 2024, she was also part of a team from the Australian Hand Surgery Society who went on an outreach trip to the National Referral Hospital at Honiara in the Solomon Island. The purpose of the visit was to deepen collaboration with local medical staff and enhance patient safety protocols. During the trip Lynette worked closely with the local scrub nurses, helped to reorganise equipment to maximise the use of available resources and assisted with surgical procedures.

Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather in uniform on Anzac Day, Lynette Eather Digital Story, 2019, State Library of Queensland. Record no 99183631719702061.
On Anzac Day Lynette attends the memorial service held at the John Flynn Hospital, laying a wreath for lost soldiers. She also attends the dawn service at Currumbin then spends the afternoon at the RSL meeting up with other service colleagues. This Anzac Day we acknowledge the service of Flight Lieutenant Lynette Eather and draw attention to the important role that reserve personnel play within the ADF, both on the homefront and aboard.
You can discover different ways to commemorate Anzac Day here.
Further Reading:
- Lynette Eather Digital Story
- Memories: FLTLT Lynette Eather, Air Force News, Thursday 16 August 2012
- Military nursing today:
- Welcome to Amberley: Annual Guide 2025
- Strategic Review of the Australian Defence Force Reserves
- USNS Mercy Hospital Ship
- Outreach Honiara October 2024: The Australian Hand Surgery Society
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