Lia Unrau – UW News /news Thu, 14 May 2009 00:00:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 UW study to look at benefits of exercise for people with ICD devices /news/2009/05/14/uw-study-to-look-at-benefits-of-exercise-for-people-with-icd-devices/ Thu, 14 May 2009 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2009/05/14/uw-study-to-look-at-benefits-of-exercise-for-people-with-icd-devices/

A new study at the UW seeks to find out how walking exercise will benefit people who have an implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD).


• Have you had an ICD inserted to regulate your heart rhythm?

• Are you taking a beta blocker medication?

• Are you willing to walk at home or in the community?

• Do you read and write English?

• Do you exercise less than 60 minutes a day, on five days per week?


If you answered yes to these questions, the UW School of Nursing would like you to consider participating in an exercise after ICD study over a six-month period.


The research project is funded by the National Institutes of Health, and is intended to study whether a graduated walking exercise program helps people with an ICD improve heart function and reduce ICD shocks. One participant group will receive the care normally given to people after an ICD, and a second participant group will receive the same medical care given to people with an ICD plus a home exercise program.


Participants will make three visits to the UW Medical Center over a period of six months (at the start of the program, at eight weeks and at 24 weeks), and can earn up to $200 upon completion of the study.


Those interested in learning more can visit the study’s Web site:  


Prospective participants can also contact Project Director Nancy Healy or Principal Investigator Cynthia Dougherty by e-mail at walkicd@u.washington.edu or phone 206-616-6558 or toll-free 1-877-616-6558.



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UW School of Nursing Leadership Awards honor nurses, volunteer /news/2009/04/02/uw-school-of-nursing-leadership-awards-honor-nurses-volunteer/ Thu, 02 Apr 2009 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2009/04/02/uw-school-of-nursing-leadership-awards-honor-nurses-volunteer/ A top hospital administrator, a pioneering sleep researcher, a pediatric nurse and a dean emeritus will be honored for their significant work as nurse leaders and volunteers at the UW School of Nursing's annual Nurses Recognition Banquet on May 7.]]>

Rheba de Tornyay

Cindy Hecker

Carol Landis

Leslie Elder

A top hospital administrator, a pioneering sleep researcher, a pediatric nurse and a dean emeritus will be honored for their significant work as nurse leaders and volunteers at the UW School of Nursing’s annual Nurses Recognition Banquet on May 7. New School of Nursing Dean Marla E. Salmon, the Robert G. and Jean A. Reid Endowed Dean in Nursing, also will speak at the event.


The Nurses Recognition Banquet celebrates National Nurses Week, held May 6-12, and four leadership award winners for their contributions to nursing.


This year’s award winners are:


Outstanding Volunteer Award: Rheba de Tornyay, dean emeritus and member of the school’s Nursing Advisory Board, is being honored for her 34 years of service to the school with the Outstanding Volunteer award. During her 11-year tenure as dean, the school established its PhD program and developed a Continuing Nursing Education program as a separate division within the school. Under de Tornyay’s leadership, the school was ranked No. 1 for the first time in 1984, a ranking it has held ever since. De Tornyay’s commitment to the school continued even after she stepped down as dean. Alongside her husband, de Tornyay established the de Tornyay Center for Healthy Aging in 1998, and in 2004, they created the de Tornyay Term Professorship in Healthy Aging. A national leader in healthy aging research and nursing education, de Tornyay continues to support the school through her advisory role.


Distinguished Alumni Award: Cindy Hecker is the chief operating officer of Harborview Medical Center. She is recognized for her work on enhancing patient care services and safety through the establishment of an after-hours clinic at Harborview for non-emergency care and increasing the efficiency of the hospital’s pharmacy operations. Her career in nursing at Harborview has spanned nearly 30 years, from her days as an RN in surgical acute care through her work on the hospital’s leadership team. She is recognized by her colleagues for her leadership, dedication, vision and patient-centered approach to care. She received her BSN from the UW School of Nursing in 1980.


Distinguished Research Award: Carol Landis is a professor in the School of Nursing’s Department of Biobehavioral Nursing and Health Systems. She is an internationally recognized leader in sleep study research, with a particular focus on the health consequences of sleep loss. She is the director of the Biobehavioral Laboratories in the Center for Women’s Health and Gender Research and a former member of the Research Advisory Board for the Center on Sleep Disorders Research at National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, a unit of the National Institutes of Health. Her groundbreaking research career includes current projects such as the Biobehavioral Nursing Research Training Grant and past studies on sleep disturbance in relation to menopause, age and health status. Carol started as an assistant professor at the UW in 1991 after receiving her doctor of nursing science degree from the University of California, San Francisco, and completing post-doctoral work at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of Chicago.


Humanitarian Award: Leslie Elder, nurse clinician in Seattle Children’s Division of Pulmonary Medicine, works as the outpatient nurse and discharge coordinator for all patients leaving the division, notably children discharged on a ventilator. An advocate and educator, Leslie works to maintain contact with the families of these patients and engages community members through her service on local committees. Recently, she worked nearly single-handedly to lobby the Legislature to increase funding for home health care and respite services for these families. According to her colleagues, her work makes it possible for the children she interacts with to thrive in their environments and lead happy lives. She is a 1991 alumna of the UW School of Nursing.


The 2009 Nurses Recognition Banquet will be held at the Sheraton Seattle Hotel. Many program sponsors also will recognize their top nurses at the event. Sponsors include: Premera Blue Cross; Marla E. Salmon and Jerry S. Anderson; Swedish Medical Center; UW Medicine: Harborview Medical Center and ӰӴý Medical Center; ERA Living; Honda of Seattle and Toyota of Seattle; Providence Health & Services; PSAV/Sheraton Seattle Hotel; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; Seattle Children’s; Group Health Cooperative; and Northwest Kidney Centers. Patrons include: Chateau Ste. Michelle, and Kimberly McNally, McNally & Associates. Proceeds from this event will go to the School of Nursing’s Fund for Nursing Excellence.


For tickets and information about the event, visit the UW Alumni Association: .  


To learn more about how to become a sponsor of this event, visit .  



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First nursing student receives Schweitzer Public Health Fellowship /news/2009/03/12/first-nursing-student-receives-schweitzer-public-health-fellowship/ Thu, 12 Mar 2009 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2009/03/12/first-nursing-student-receives-schweitzer-public-health-fellowship/ UW School of Nursing doctoral student Carey McCarthy has been has been named one of this year's three Lambarene Schweitzer Public Health Fellows by The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship.]]>

Carey McCarthy

UW School of Nursing doctoral student Carey McCarthy has been has been named one of this year’s three Lambarene Schweitzer Public Health Fellows by The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship. This marks the first time that a nurse has been selected as a fellow for the organization, which has been sending students to Gabon, Africa, since 1979.


McCarthy, a first-year doctoral student, is planning to study nurse migration and global health workforce issues. She is also interested in working to strengthen nursing infrastructure and leadership capacity in lesser developed countries. As a fellow, she will go to the Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Gabon for three months this summer to work with the hospital’s Community Health Outreach Program, which provides village-based health care, including maternal and child health, HIV/AIDS education and prevention, tuberculosis education and follow-up, and malaria prevention and treatment.


“The Albert Schweitzer philosophy of ‘reverence for life’ really resonates with me,” she said. “I think every person, no matter where they happen to live, deserves reverence, respect and access to health care and services.”


No stranger to international health experiences, McCarthy has traveled and worked in more than 30 countries, including Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Azerbaijan, as well as several countries in South America. From 2007 to 2008, she worked with HIV/AIDS patients in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo with Doctors Without Borders. McCarthy received a bachelor’s degree in nursing from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and a master’s in public health (MPH) from Johns Hopkins University in 2005.


McCarthy was first drawn to nursing following a summer experience working with street children in Bolivia. After working internationally as a nurse, McCarthy wanted to make a larger difference than on the clinical scale, which motivated her to return to school to receive her MPH, focusing in global health.


“I want to study and work in global health because I can’t accept the huge health disparities that exist between countries — I want to do something to address them,” she said.


Founded in the United States in 1940, The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship was created to support Dr. Schweitzer’s medical work in Africa during World War II. Since Schweitzer’s death in 1965, the Fellowship has continued to provide direct assistance to the Schweitzer Hospital in Lambaréné, Gabon, and, and more recently, to underserved communities within the U.S.


Each year since 1979, The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship has selected four third-year medical students to spend three months working as Fellows at the Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Lambaréné, Gabon, on clinical rotations. Beginning in 2007, The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship began sending up to two public health fellows each year, students or recent graduates with significant public health training and/or experience.


For more information about The Albert Schweitzer Fellowship, visit: .  

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A conversation with School of Nursing Dean Marla Salmon /news/2008/11/20/a-conversation-with-school-of-nursing-dean-marla-salmon/ Thu, 20 Nov 2008 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2008/11/20/a-conversation-with-school-of-nursing-dean-marla-salmon/ Marla E.]]>

Marla Salmon

Marla E. Salmon (Sahl-mon) took on the role of dean of the School of Nursing on Oct. 1. Dr. Salmon, the Robert G. and Jean A. Reid Endowed Dean in Nursing and a professor in the Department of Psychosocial and Community Health and the Department of Global Health, talks about her background and ideas for the future of the school.


Q:  Please tell me a little bit about why you chose to become a nurse. Your mother was a nurse.

MS:  I saw nursing as an important way to make a difference in the world. And I saw this modeled, both in terms of my mother who was a nurse, but also the partnership that my mother and father had in making a difference in the community. My father was an old-time general practitioner who practiced with my mother — both were devoted to the people they served. So, I think that my career in nursing is a natural evolution of my early knowledge that nursing makes a huge difference in the lives of people — particularly those who are most vulnerable.

Q:  How do you think you came to care about vulnerable populations?

MS:  When I was a child, my parents required my brother and me to work in the fields with migrant workers. We started doing “clean up” (picking up apples and pears from the ground) and got to know the migrant workers and their families who were working there. My parents really wanted us to learn, literally from the ground up, about the lives of other people. For me, this experience resulted in a very direct realization that migrant workers were truly remarkable people who worked incredibly hard, were vulnerable in so many ways and were pretty much forgotten by society. My parents were very sensitive to the needs of rural people and marginalized people, so they believed that it was important for us to see first-hand how others lived. Both of my parents were committed to serving all people, not just those with the ability to pay. Perhaps because they both came from deep poverty and suffering as children. So I guess you’d have to say that the concept of social justice was part of my early life experience — though I didn’t learn those words until many years later.


Q:  What experiences stand out as shaping your career paths?

MS:  This question is one that I can’t answer easily, because so many events and incredible people have shaped my life. So, let me answer this in terms of two factors. One is the force of events around me, and the second is individuals who in some way saw something in me that I didn’t see in myself. I think that between my own family and the experiences of my generation, I couldn’t help but have a constant sense that there is so much in this world that needs to happen to improve the lives of people. And, of course, I’ve seen this through the lens of nursing, which has so much to offer in this regard. As for individuals, I have been blessed over and over again with people who have seen in me possibilities that I’d never have imagined. It’s been those people who have said things like, “Gee, why don’t you apply for a Fulbright,” who have shaped my life in lasting ways. In the Fulbright example, it was a German professor who, you know, I was an undergraduate nursing student and I’d studied in Austria and spoke German. I didn’t even know what a Fulbright was or why I would apply for it, but he could see that I was interested in policy, I was becoming a nurse, I wanted to make a difference, and I saw a world beyond my own country’s borders. He also believed in me, which was an incredible gift. So it has really been those incredible people who have understood me in ways that I did not and the compelling realities that I’ve experienced that have played very important roles in my life. Through all of this I’ve also come to realize how important it is for those of us who have benefitted in these ways to also open doors for others.

Q:  Why did you want to be dean here? What do you think you bring to the School of Nursing?

MS:  The things that called me here were both the context and the strength of the school and this university. I believe that this is a place — one of the few places — that some of society’s most important and urgent issues can be addressed in ways that create real solutions. Great universities and schools of nursing have a special responsibility to do just that.

Secondly, this is a community that thrives on innovation. And, it’s also a place that has deep experience in re-imagining the ways in which we do things. So for me it is a very attractive opportunity to try to make a difference in the things that matter. It’s not that I have a vision for how to do any of this. I don’t. That’s for the whole school to figure out — building on the strength of the school and the strength of the collaborations that can be created. So, coming here is really a statement of my knowledge that the real tangible possibility exists to have a profound impact on health in the future, and that this school has the capacity to do it.


Q:  Tell us a little bit about your own research passion and how you became interested in global nursing?

MS:  My scholarship is fundamentally about the capacity of nursing — and other kinds of health workers — to meet the health care needs of the public. The kinds of research that I’ve been involved with have looked at capacity from the perspective of the supply, requirements, distribution, quality and utilization of nurses. Over the last two decades, my work has focused on this from a policy perspective, looking at the policy frameworks that enable a country, or countries, to have the capacity of workforce that they need. So it’s educational policy, it’s trade policy, it’s regulation in terms of the scope of nursing practice and the roles of governments in this regard. I can’t talk about the capacity of nursing in the U.S. without talking about the capacity of nursing worldwide. The U.S. is the single largest consumer of nurses around the world — from around the world. Most of the workforce engagement globally started when I was working in the Department of Health and Human Services as the director of the Division of Nursing. And in that role I was responsible for developing frameworks in which the capacity of the U.S. nursing workforce was optimal. So that became a global piece. I worked with chief nurses around the world and still do.

I’m absolutely passionate about research that makes a difference in peoples’ lives. And the research that I believe is most important, particularly with respect to nursing, is research that is fundamentally linked to beginning with and moving back into the health of people, and I think that the notion of “from bench to bedside and from bedside to bench” is absolutely what has to happen in terms of nursing research. Finding solutions for problems, finding new ways of doing things, getting a better understanding of health and how we can improve health, and how we can help others improve their own health.


Q:  What part can the School of Nursing play in the future of nursing?

MS:  I think that this school of nursing has a fundamental obligation to lead in shaping the future of health and caring — and creating a very different future. When you are privileged in the way that this school is, having great people doing great work, and having a platform of being known as a leading school of nursing, to do anything but lead is really ridiculous. This school owes society its best efforts at doing what only it can do. That means as we’re looking at the broader state, nation and world, we need to constantly ask ourselves if we are truly living out our responsibility. Are we doing what needs to be done that we are best positioned to do? Are we letting go sometimes of things that others can do better or, in ways that perhaps we shouldn’t be doing? To be constantly self-aware about that obligation is really critical to being a leader and going beyond just being number one. For me, what matters really isn’t about maintaining the school’s fantastic reputation. At the end of the day, it’s about living up to the obligation of using that excellence to make the differences that only this school can make.  


Q:  What are your particular priorities and goals for the SoN?


MS:  Gaining clarity about a vision for the future will really require my getting a very good understanding of the school, the aspirations of the people in it, and creating a vision that is a truly shared venture. This will take some time. If I have one goal, it’s to become as well acquainted with the wonderful people and what is being done here as possible, while also at the same time as dean, framing the opportunities that we have so that we actually can move forward in ways that build on them.


Q:   What kinds of partnerships and collaborations do you envision for the school?


MS:   My experience with partnerships and collaborations are that they work best when they share a purpose and when all involved are quite clear on what they’re both contributing and receiving. So, partnerships for the school need to advance the schools’ priorities as those emerge, and they need to be as explicit as possible. Everybody in the world is saying that the solutions to problems lie between disciplines, or across sectors and that collaboration is critical to really finding them. Yet, to my knowledge, most curricula in most professional schools don’t teach how to develop, manage, maintain or even dissolve partnerships and collaborations. As a result, partnerships can be very challenging. Given all of this, I want to see partnerships that are both purposeful and well-managed. My basic premise is that the answers to the big questions that nursing faces lie at the interface, they don’t lie within any one discipline.


Q:  What do you do to unwind?


MS:  I grew up on a ranch, so dirt is good. I love playing in the dirt and crave the outdoors. So, I try to find ways to be as close to the outdoors as possible. It might be finding a quiet place to read, listening to the sounds of the wind moving through trees, or hiking — being outside is very close to my soul. Being near mountains and water is very important, so as you might imagine, being out here in Washington is pretty much heaven for me. I’m just engaging in this incredible feast of the outdoors that is possible here. And I do like to read, listen to music, and get family time whenever possible.


Q:  What drew you to becoming a black belt in the martial arts?


MS:  When our kids were little, my husband and I decided that we needed to find something that we could do together. I never imagined that it would be tae kwan do — but events took us in that direction. So, we all learned tae kwan do, competed together in our region and we all became black belts — and three of the four of us became second degree black belts. Tae kwon do is now a dormant discipline for me, at least with respect to its physical expression. What is not dormant, though, are some of the underlying precepts and ways that in which one sees the world. When you’re engaged in a martial art that is philosophically based, your life is changed. Tae kwon do is a defensive art that is built on the premise of respect for others and finding a “center” in yourself that allows you to transcend events and get a larger sense of what’s going on. It moves one from seeing life as a set of encounters to seeing the world very differently. Perhaps not everyone has this type of experience, but for me, tae kwon do was a life-changing experience. And, it was a great way to spend time as a family.


Q:  Are there any similarities between practicing tae kwan do and being a dean?


MS:  Not in the ways that one might imagine. I think that people think of martial arts as combative and adversarial. Given the perspective that I shared with you about my experience with tae kwon do, I do see a connection with being a dean. Serving as a dean requires knowledge, skill, commitment, discipline, reflection and thoughtful practice. One must be intentional and be willing to sacrifice. Being a dean is about focusing on others and on the relationship with others in the context of seeking a better future together. There is that foundational respect for others that is critical to being a dean — you have to remove yourself in some ways, but not lose your presence. You have to be both analytic and responsive and engaged. I don’t want to stretch this analogy too far, but I do think that I have benefitted from the lessons of tae kwon do and do see some connection.


Q:  Is there anything else you’d like to add?


MS:  Just one thing. I never want people to think of me as a dean without thinking of me as a faculty member – and as a citizen of the academy. I want people to understand that I see our school and university as places where faculty, staff and students make things happen that matter. And that none of us can do this alone. I really value the contributions and the importance of all members of the academic community and am proud to also be an academic citizen. I hope that people will understand that I see that being a dean is something that you do — it’s not something that you should ever become.


 


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School of Nursing honors profession’s leaders /news/2008/05/08/school-of-nursing-honors-professions-leaders/ Thu, 08 May 2008 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2008/05/08/school-of-nursing-honors-professions-leaders/ Four women will be recognized for their work as nurse-leaders and volunteers at the UW School of Nursing's annual Nurses Recognition Banquet today.]]>

Donna L. Berry

Four women will be recognized for their work as nurse-leaders and volunteers at the UW School of Nursing’s annual Nurses Recognition Banquet today.

About 425 nurses and health care leaders are expected to attend the event at the Sheraton Seattle Hotel.

The event will feature keynote speaker Suzanne Gordon, a journalist and nurse advocate who has focused on telling the stories and addressing the concerns of nurses, caregivers and the health care field. The event will also pay tribute to Dean Nancy Fugate Woods, recognizing her decade of service as the school’s dean.

The Nurses Recognition Banquet celebrates National Nurses Week, held May 6-12, and four individual leadership award winners for their contributions to nursing. One award is designated for an alumnus of the school.

This year’s award winners are:

Distinguished Research Award: Professor Donna L. Berry is one of the nation’s foremost researchers in the human response to cancer. Berry, the Myrene C. McAninch Term Professor in Nursing, is known for her work in studying patient-centered care, treatment decision-making and quality-of-life assessment in cancer patients.

Berry holds a clinical appointment with the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance as a nurse researcher, and she has been honored with the Oncology Nursing Society’s Excellence in Nursing Informatics award. Berry earned her doctoral degree from the UW in 1992.

The Distinguished Research Award recognizes a nurse researcher whose professional achievements and cumulative contributions have brought personal distinction, enhanced the profession, improved the welfare of the general public and brought honor and prestige to his or her field.

Distinguished Alumni Award: Judith Huntington, executive director of the Washington State Nurses Association, has played a pivotal role in creating regional, state and national health policies. Among her accomplishments is serving as a founding member of the state Committee for Affordable Health Care, launching the state’s Basic Health Plan. Huntington earned her bachelor’s degree in nursing from the UW in 1968 and her master’s degree in nursing from the UW in 1985.

The Distinguished Alumni Award recognizes a UW School of Nursing alumna or alumnus whose career in nursing exemplifies excellence in clinical practice, leadership in professional organizations, outstanding accomplishments and contributions to the community.

Humanitarian Award: Lisa Black is a pediatric nurse at Providence Everett Medical Center. As a pediatric staff nurse, she provides nursing care to newborns through teens and support to their families, and she contributed to a groundbreaking initiative to teach computer ordering and charting to hospital staff to increase efficiency.

She also volunteers for the Washington Trails Association, leading work groups in trail restoration. Black earned a bachelor’s in nursing from the UW in 1993. The Humanitarian Award honors a nurse whose dedicated work and exemplary service have benefited society and the practice of nursing. Any nurse who has demonstrated service above and beyond expectations is eligible for the humanitarian award.

Outstanding Volunteer Award: Daughter of a country doctor, Ellery Cramer is a steadfast supporter of the School of Nursing. She serves as a member of the school’s Campaign Advisory Board, and together with her husband, Kirby, endowed a professorship in nursing. She also has been instrumental in reaching out to donors to the Center for Excellence in Nursing Education, the school’s learning-skills lab. Cramer earned a bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University in 1959.

The Outstanding Volunteer Award acknowledges a volunteer who embodies the ideals of the UW School of Nursing and whose leadership, dedication and contributions reflect an ongoing commitment to serve others through his or her vision and support of the school.

Many program sponsors also will recognize their top nurses at the event. Among the sponsors of the 2008 Recognition Banquet recognizing their top nurses are Harborview Medical Center and UW Medical Center (UWMC).

Harborview honorees: Cindy Hecker, Darcy Jaffe, Annette Kuhls, Sue Manfredi, Chris Martin, Kathy Mertens, Paula Minton- Foltz and Becky Pierce.

UWMC honorees: Earl Batiste, Lori Chudnofski, Peggy Cox, Joan DiGiacomo, Linda Hayes-Gallegos, Mary Jo Kelly, Terrie Paine and Eileen Suver.

Other sponsors of the recognition banquet are Premera Blue Cross, Swedish Medical Center, Providence Health & Services, Era Living, Evercare Washington, Group Health Cooperative, Northwest Kidney Centers and Virginia Mason Medical Center.

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Nursing dean moving ‘up’ to teaching /news/2008/01/31/nursing-dean-moving-up-to-teaching/ Thu, 31 Jan 2008 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2008/01/31/nursing-dean-moving-up-to-teaching/ EDITOR'S NOTE: Nancy Woods has been a faculty member of the UW School of Nursing since 1978.]]>

Dean Nancy Woods of the the School of Nursing, looks forward to more music and continued research when she steps down later this year.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Nancy Woods has been a faculty member of the UW School of Nursing since 1978. A founding director of the school’s internationally recognized Center for Women’s Health Research and a former chair of the Department of Family and Child Nursing, Woods was appointed dean of the school in 1998. She will retire from the position later this year. Here she talks with University Week about the evolution of the UW School of Nursing and the nursing education it provides.

Q. What drew you to the profession of nursing?

A. I had great opportunities to get to know women in my neighborhood who were nurses. It was the ’60s. We were all seeking something relevant to do with our lives. The thing that really impressed me was how smart these women were and how they used their knowledge to figure out what was wrong with somebody’s health and to sometimes save their life.

Q. How has the School of  Nursing changed since you became dean in 1998?

A. We have an increasingly global focus, more diversity. We’re a real research powerhouse in the country. Our academic programs have become much more accessible, with our educational outreach efforts and distance learning, and we have grown tremendously in our capacity for specialty education at the graduate level, including our leading DNP [Doctor of Nursing Practice] program.

Q. When you look back at your tenure as dean, what accomplishments stand out?

A. Some of the more recent examples are sustaining our topranked graduate program, sustaining our undergraduate enrollments in the face of budget cuts with support from our clinical partners, having increased BSN [Bachelor of Science in Nursing] enrollment from 64 to 96 in the face of those state budget cuts, launching MEPN [Masters Entry Program in Nursing] for second degree students, access to our programs for nurses in underserved areas through use of technology, building partnerships with local hospitals, and pioneering the DNP program.

Our global health learning opportunities, especially for the undergraduate students. I don’t know any other state school that has anything beginning to compare with that.

Q. What are the most visible changes to nursing education in the past 10 years? What does the new Doctor of Nursing Practice degree mean for the school?

A. The complexity of health care has increased, and in response, we needed to strengthen our academic programs. The DNP grows out of the need for strengthening people’s preparation for practice and giving them the intellectual skills that they need to puzzle their way through some of the complexity. In another sense, our faculty who are pioneering the DNP program here really set the standard for the curricula in the country — the papers that the group has written have changed the field. With the MEPN program, we’re looking at ways of producing people who can assume roles as clinical leaders. One of the real challenges for the future is nurse retention beyond the first year, and that’s largely the influence of leaders. With MEPN, we’re also strengthening the educational preparation for students to graduate from that program and very quickly assume leadership roles, but also to have a stronger preparation for the realities of practice.

Q. The school is wrapping up a $24 million fundraising campaign, in which more than $28 million has been raised so far. What is the impact of those gifts?

A. The big thing is having tripled the size of our endowment. That’s important because it creates a permanent source of support for our students and faculty, and program support for our Center for Excellence in Nursing Education. In addition to the financial support, fundraising has elevated the recognition of the school in the broader community.

Q. What opportunities do you see in the future for the School of Nursing to enhance community relationships?

A. The naming of assistant deans for clinical practice and partnering in ways that enhance our educational offerings has been greatly important to us. Now people do know that, not only do we exist, but that we work to be responsive to their needs. I think that [our partnership with] Providence Everett Healthcare Clinic is going to serve as a really great model for other parts of the state as an example of how communities can be part of solutions to health care access and can also benefit. If we can engage communities in looking at partnerships with clinics such as Providence Everett we could be doing a lot more for the population.

Q. The national nurse shortage and the shortage of faculty to teach nurses remain pressing concerns — what role do you think the School of Nursing has played in trying to address those concerns?

A. In 1998 we were graduating 64 BSNs. This year, we will graduate 96 BSNs and we will have contributed 25 MEPN students, and in 2009 we will have prepared 96 BSNs plus 48 MEPNs. Overall, since 1998, that’s about a 125 percent increase in the size of our two programs to prepare new nurses.

More importantly, our preparation of teacher practitioners has focused on the increasing complexity of practice and the need to prepare people to solve very complex problems in real time. The more we use new technologies for teaching like simulation and problem-based learning and interprofessional education, the better the foundation for people to address real world challenges.

Q. What has led to the UW School of Nursing’s many accolades?

A. I think we have uncompromising standards of quality, meaning very high expectations of ourselves to do better each day. We have a strong diversity of opinions in this school about how to do things, which is wonderful because it keeps us from the “group think.” I think we have a very strong work ethic that is probably driven by just looking at the huge need for nursing.

Q. What do you wish everyone knew and understood about nursing?

A. It would be great if somebody could just follow a nurse for a 12-hour shift and just observe what it’s like, but even so, you might not be able to appreciate the heavy responsibility that nurses bear for the care of people, especially those in hospitals where there are life or death consequences of how we practice. The nurses in our advanced practice programs are out changing health care as we speak. They’re also in communities providing primary care, really being the mainstays for primary care in some areas.

Q. You have talked about being part of the first generation of female nurse-scientists who juggled work with raising a family. What was that like?

A. Challenging! It stretched my creativity to remain an active investigator and an educator and a good mother. I was fortunate to have a very supportive husband. Jim and I both agreed that if we each did our 75 percent we could make it work!

Q. What are your plans after you step down as dean?

A. I plan to step up to being a faculty member again and to focus on the health of mid-life and older women and working with students again. I’m really looking forward to that and who knows what else will come down the pike.

Q. Are there things you do now in your “free time” — things that you do to relax now or things you’re looking forward to that you might be able to do more of?

A. Top of the list is, I love to play music and I’ve had very little time for that over the last 10 years, and I’m trying to figure out how to reintergrate that into my life. I like the intellectual challenge of playing that is more than just technique; its the musicianship of thinking about what the right emotion is of the piece and the meaning and interpretation.

Q. I happen to know you play the piano and the flute. do you anticipate doing any ensembles or performances?

A. There’s a group of adult students who study with my flute teacher; I think we might be playing more together. I also enjoy playing both the flute and the piano solo. 

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Brown appointed Group Health Endowed Nursing Professor /news/2007/08/02/brown-appointed-group-health-endowed-nursing-professor/ Thu, 02 Aug 2007 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2007/08/02/brown-appointed-group-health-endowed-nursing-professor/

Marie-Annette Brown

Marie-Annette Brown, professor of family and child nursing at the UW School of Nursing, is the recipient of the school’s new Group Health Endowed Nursing Professorship in Chronic Illness Care, Dean Nancy Woods announced last week.

“Marie-Annette is recognized internationally as a thought-leader in how nursing can best advance its practice to promote self-care and enhance wellness for individuals and families who are living with chronic illness conditions,” Woods said. “She is recognized as a pace-setter and policy leader for advancing nursing practice roles.”

Brown’s work as an educator, researcher and nurse practitioner gives her firsthand knowledge of the many roles nurses play in caring for patients with chronic illnesses. Brown is known for her expertise in grief and loss, sub-clinical depression and nurse practitioner practice. In her study on families dealing with HIV/AIDS and cancer, she provided caregiving information and group support via telephone to lay caregivers in outlying areas of the Pacific Northwest.

She has also studied pioneer and novice nurse practitioners and practice issues such as prescribing barriers faced by nurse practitioners in Washington state. Her specialization in women’s health and her expertise in chronic menstrual cycle problems contribute to her success as a family nurse practitioner at the UW Medical Center Women’s Health Care Clinic. Her research about mild depression led her to coauthor a book called When Your Body Gets the Blues.

At the UW School of Nursing, Brown serves in multiple leadership positions, including coordinator of both the family nurse practitioner program and the primary care program. She currently spearheads development of the new Doctor of Nursing Practice degree.

An elected fellow of the American Academy of Nursing, Brown earned a bachelor’s degree in nursing from Vanderbilt University in 1970, a master’s degree in nursing from the UW in 1972 and a doctoral degree in nursing science, also from the UW, in 1983.

The professorship allows the school to recruit, retain, reward and recognize distinguished faculty who conduct research and teaching in the area of chronic illness care. Established with a $250,000 gift from Group Health Cooperative, the professorship also provides the UW much-needed support at a time when nursing schools across the country are facing a significant faculty shortage.

In particular, this professorship supports an outstanding faculty leader’s work in educating future nurse leaders, both in academic and clinical settings. It also helps the school and Group Health promote recognition of the ways in which nurses support and improve patient care.

An endowed professorship is a permanent fund established to support a faculty position. Gifts to endowments are invested to create a powerful resource that grows in perpetuity.

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School of Nursing honors outstanding 2007 nurses /news/2007/05/17/school-of-nursing-honors-outstanding-2007-nurses/ Thu, 17 May 2007 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2007/05/17/school-of-nursing-honors-outstanding-2007-nurses/

Mary Salazar

Elaine Thompson

Meg Hatlen

Betty McCurdy

The UW School of Nursing honored outstanding nurses and volunteers at its 2007 annual Nurses Recognition Banquet May 10 at the W Hotel in Seattle. The event featured Eric Liu, author of Guiding Lights: The People Who Lead Us Toward Our Purpose in Life, as guest speaker.

Held during National Nurses Week, which is celebrated annually the week of May 6-12, this year’s program recognized graduates and nursing community leaders and highlighted the role of mentorship in nursing. Four individuals received Leadership Awards for their work. One award was given to an alumna of the school. The award winners were:


Distinguished Alumni Award: Mary Salazar, professor in the School of Nursing’s Department of Psychosocial and Community Health, has literally written the book on occupational health nursing, editing the third edition of Core Curriculum in Occupational and Environmental Health Nursing, among many other publications. She is an internationally recognized researcher on the health risks of migrant and seasonal farm workers. Her work has addressed health risks associated with orchard work and pesticide exposure, and she has orchestrated successful collaborations among researchers, clinicians and members of the agricultural community. Her leadership as director of the school’s occupational and environmental health nursing program has helped the Pacific Northwest become known for having the best-educated occupational environmental health nurses in the country. Salazar graduated from the UW School of Nursing with a bachelor’s degree in 1982 and a master’s degree in 1986.


Distinguished Researcher Award: Elaine Thompson, the Sandra and Peter Dyer Term Professor in Nursing in the UW School of Nursing’s Department of Psychosocial and Community Health, has dedicated her career to improving the health and well-being of adolescents, focusing her research on the prevention of adolescent depression, aggression, substance use, risky behaviors and suicide risk. She is an expert in the implementation and evaluation of prevention programs that reduce risk factors and enhance resilience by increasing coping skills, problem-solving abilities and access to support resources. As a principal investigator and cofounder of the federally funded Reconnecting Youth Prevention Research Program, Thompson has examined the effects of psychosocial risk and protective factors on adolescent development. The program serves as a model nationally and internationally. Thompson received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in nursing in 1970 and 1972, respectively, and a doctorate in social psychology in 1990, all from the UW.


Humanitarian Award: Meg Hatlen, nurse supervisor and clinical manager at Renton Public Health Center, began her career in public health nursing as a neonatal intensive care nurse at Tacoma General Hospital in 1980, and in 1982 accepted a position in the Seattle-King County Public Health Department. Through her work as a Nursing Child Assessment Satellite Training (NCAST) instructor, she certified registered nurses and public health nurses in Seattle-King County Public Health clinics. She was hired as the personal health services supervisor at the Renton and Kent Public Health centers in 2001. Her coworkers remark on her deep understanding of the complexities of public health issues and her positive attitude. Hatlen’s dedication to her work positions her as a role model for other public health nurses. Hatlen received her master’s degree from the ӰӴý in 1996.


Outstanding Volunteer Award: Betty McCurdy was a founding member of the UW School of Nursing Visiting Committee in 1969, and strongly endorsed the transition of the visiting committee into the current Campaign Advisory Board, of which she is a member. She has been active in many alumni and outreach programs at the UW, serving from 1983-84 as the second female president in the history of the UW Alumni Association. Both Betty and her husband, Jim McCurdy ’45, have been generous supporters of the UW through their involvement and membership in the UW Alumni Association. They were honored with the UW Alumni Distinguished Service Award in 1989, and have donated more than $1 million to various UW funds. One of their largest gifts has gone to the School of Nursing. Betty McCurdy graduated from the UW in 1949 with a bachelor’s degree in nursing, and she received certification in public health and community medicine that same year.

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Group Health endows nursing professorship in chronic illness /news/2007/05/10/group-health-endows-nursing-professorship-in-chronic-illness/ Thu, 10 May 2007 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2007/05/10/group-health-endows-nursing-professorship-in-chronic-illness/ Group Health Cooperative has endowed a new professorship at the UW School of Nursing, Dean Nancy Woods announced this week.]]>

Group Health Cooperative has endowed a new professorship at the UW School of Nursing, Dean Nancy Woods announced this week.


The new professorship, called the Group Health Endowed Nursing Professorship in Chronic Illness Care, allows the school to recruit, retain, reward and recognize distinguished faculty who conduct research and teaching in the area of chronic illness care. Established with a $250,000 gift, the professorship also provides the UW much-needed support at a time when nursing schools across the country are facing a significant faculty shortage.

“We are extremely pleased to partner with Group Health in advancing nursing education and preparing future nurses,” Woods said. “This endowed professorship also recognizes Group Health’s remarkable commitment to nursing excellence.”

Today’s nurse must blend the art of service with the rigor of science, a delicate balancing act that demands critical thinking and continuous learning throughout a career, said Barbara Trehearne, executive director of nursing at Group Health Cooperative.

“The endowed professorship in nursing will create a tremendous opportunity to promote a nationwide agenda related to how nursing interventions affect outcomes in ambulatory care,” Trehearne said. “This effort also supports our continued work and understanding of how nurses support and improve care for our patients.”

Group Health chose to support a faculty member in the area of chronic illness, explained Dr. Hugh Straley, Group Health medical director, because “the Cooperative was a pioneer in the study of chronic disease management. The care provided by nurses in this field has been associated with greater adherence by patients to medical care plans, the appropriate use of medication and an improved quality of life. As the population ages, so do the numbers of people who must thrive despite the presence of one or more chronic illnesses. The influence of the nurse upon this burgeoning group figures profoundly, both in the education and treatment of individual patients, and in complex population management generally.”

The endowed professorship not only promotes the research vital to advancements in the field of nursing, it develops future caregivers, Trehearne said. “Strategic partnerships such as the one Group Health enjoys with the UW School of Nursing become crucial as we face a rising number of elderly patients with complex needs.”

An endowed professorship is a permanent fund established to support a faculty position. Gifts to endowments are invested to create a powerful resource that grows in perpetuity.


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deTornyay Lecture to examine healthy aging and dementia /news/2007/04/26/detornyay-lecture-to-examine-healthy-aging-and-dementia/ Thu, 26 Apr 2007 00:00:00 +0000 /news/2007/04/26/detornyay-lecture-to-examine-healthy-aging-and-dementia/

Linda Teri

How caregivers of those with dementia can improve quality of life for themselves and their patients or loved ones is the topic of the School of Nursing’s annual de Tornyay Center for Healthy Aging Spring Lecture on Thursday, May 3, from 3 to 4 p.m. in Hogness Auditorium, Health Sciences Center. Linda Teri, professor of psychosocial and community health in the UW School of Nursing, will present, Healthy Aging and Dementia — When the Two Meet: Caring for Yourself and Those You Love. The lecture is free and open to the public.

Teri, founding director of the School of Nursing’s de Tornyay Center for Healthy Aging, is the 2006 recipient of the Gerontological Society of America’s prestigious Lawton Award for significant contribution in gerontology that improves the lives of older adults. She also received the Alzheimer’s Association Pioneer Award for her groundbreaking work in psychosocial treatments to reduce behavioral problems in persons with dementia.

The de Tornyay Center for Healthy Aging honors Rheba de Tornyay, dean emeritus of the UW School of Nursing, and her lifelong interest in healthy aging. The center serves as a catalyst for promoting healthy aging through its support of research and education in the field of gerontology for the School of Nursing, the UW, and the broader community.

This annual public lecture is sponsored by the de Tornyay Center for Healthy Aging and the UW School of Nursing. For more information, contact Lia Unrau, director of communications, at unrau@u.washington.edu or 206-221-2456.


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