SCHOOL OF NURSING | 2012
School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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PICTURED ARE STUDENTS from the first class at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing in 1969 (left) and our recent graduating class (right). As we highlight the accomplishments and growth within our school, we also celebrate its proud history.
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SOUTHSIDE PRIDE:
A Community Mobilization
Researchers from the School of Nursing are helping members of a San Antonio community change their children’s and grandchildren’s futures by empowering them so they can reduce the plague of violence.
8 Academic Center for Evidence-
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Based Practice Celebrates 10 Years of Improving Healthcare
Ten years ago, The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing launched the Academic Center for Evidence-Based Practice (ACE).
10 NORMA MARTINEZ ROGERS: A Life Of Service Norma Martinez Rogers, PhD, RN, FAAN, has devoted her life to service to the community.
12 NURSING ALUMNI. WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
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Over 10,000 alumni of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing live both locally and across the world. Visit makelivesbetter.uthscsa.edu to connect with classmates or colleagues from the school.
18 Our Blueprint to Transform the Future of Nursing Care Today, our blueprint for nursing education is becoming a reality. Through the generosity of individuals, foundations and corporations and the scholarly efforts of our faculty, we have accomplished much.
23 Connecting With The Community
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DEAN’S MESSAGE
5 The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio MISSION
9 Meet Our New Tenure Track Faculty 14 Determination to Succeed From migrant field work to nursing
23 22 Bridging Oceans Expanding the Pipeline Abroad 26 Nursing Advisory Council The Bridge to the Community 28 SUPPORTING THE NEXT GENERATION
School of Nursing | Office of the Nursing Dean 7703 Floyd Curl Drive San Antonio, TX 78229-3900 210-567-5313
29 DONOR HONOR ROLL
16 NEW ACCELERATED BSN TRACK Accelerates Students, Transforms Health Care
30 FACULTY GRANTS,
20 Office of Admissions & Student Services Advancing Health Care, One Student at a Time
34 Family & Community Health
21 OFFICE OF PRACTICE & ENGAGEMENT Building Interdisciplinary Healthcare Teams of the Future
To Make Lives Better The good news: Nursing is more relevant than ever to health, and the The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing is taking students in innovative, socially involved directions. The bad news: The state budget deficit is forcing cuts to the school’s budget (and to those of all state supported schools).
PUBLICATIONS, AWARDS
Systems Faculty
35 Health Restoration & Care Systems Management Faculty
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School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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DEAN’S MESSAGE Dear Friends,
“Growth and success does not happen in isolation. External stakeholders have been the key to crafting the vision of our future at the school of nursing.”
We are excited to introduce our inaugural magazine, paying “Tribute” to our outstanding students, faculty, alumni and community advocates. In the following pages you will read our School of Nursing story as captured through the themes of Discovery, Diversity, Delivery, Development and Dedication. Now is an unprecedented time for the nursing profession. The Institute of Medicine’s landmark report “The Future of Nursing: Advancing Health, Leading Change” engages us to think in new ways about nursing. How will we educate future nurses? What new knowledge will our scientists uncover to address health disparities, intervene and manage chronic disease, prevent disease and promote health as well as improve health system function, safety and efficiency? What will our practice look like as we engage as full partners and leaders designing the health systems of the future? How will we improve the health of the public? Our School of Nursing community is fully vested in seeking answers to these questions. Our faculty’s dedication is transforming the nursing curriculum at the undergraduate and graduate levels, developing and executing a dynamic strategic plan into a reality, bringing their scholarship to life through the millions of dollars in research funding and completing a very successful CCNE accreditation process. Their commitment to excellence is inspirational. Our student body is exceptionally qualified and diverse. Students engage in interprofessional learning opportunities and community service learning activities—hallmarks of excellence. Growth and success does not happen in isolation. External stakeholders have been the key to crafting the vision of our future at the school of nursing. Two groups stand out: The Methodist Health Care Ministries and the Nursing Advisory Council. The Methodist Healthcare Ministries has been transformational in our growth through a $3.9 million gift. This gift provided the essential resources to expand our student body and create cutting edge educational opportunities to our students. The Ministries generosity provided the “spark,” for additional funding partners to join us on our exciting journey. The Nursing Advisory Council (NAC) board members serve as our voice in the community. The NAC was recognized during our recent accreditation visit as a unique, and envied resource by many institutions. Their valuable work educates our legislative partners; funds pilot research projects, funds scholarships for our students and faculty to pursue doctoral education, and is the community connection: growing our philanthropy and practice opportunities throughout South Texas. We are hopeful that this tribute will inspire you to engage with us. We now have over 10,000 alumni who work and live around the world. We want to hear from you. As we have done since 1969, our school remains committed to educating today’s nursing leaders who will change the landscape of healthcare and play an even more critical role in translating today’s discoveries into tomorrow’s cures. Each day, we create novel discoveries, educate in a culture rich in diversity, deliver quality, evidence-based care to our community, and remain committed to growth through our development efforts. We do so through the dedication of all. We are grateful to you for being a part of the school of nursing and welcome you to join our online community “NetCommunity.” Even better, please join us on campus to personally experience the growth and excitement. Thank you for your support. Together, we truly hold in our hands the opportunity to build a future that makes lives better.
Eileen T. Breslin | PhD, RN, FAAN Dean and Professor Dr. Patty L. Hawken Nursing Endowed Professor School of Nursing The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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Mission We engage with our diverse students and communities to produce the future nursing leaders of our expanding world who will lead the transformation of nursing care to make lives better through education, research, and practice.
Values We believe excellent health care is a right of every person. We believe physical, mental and social well-being is enhanced with high ethical standards, by honoring the dignity of others, and through accountability for our actions. We believe education is a lifelong process based on mutual teaching and learning and research that ultimately makes life better for those we serve. We believe through our leadership we can influence organizations and governments within our communities to adopt practices and policy that promote health. We believe in the power of professional nurses to improve the health status of peoples here and abroad.
Vision The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing promotes excellent health care as an act of social justice for individuals and their diverse communities by creating dynamic inter-professional approaches to lead research and prepare professional nurses to deliver effective, compassionate, innovative, and culturally proficient care.
Goals Teaching: Provide leading edge, evidence-based instruction including innovative teaching technologies appropriate to the students and communities we serve. Organizational Effectiveness: Provide an effective, efficient and inclusive infrastructure to support faculty, staff and students as they fulfill the mission of the School of Nursing. Research: Become a nationally and internationally recognized health-related research institution. Practice/Service: The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing faculty will be recognized as a provider of exemplary, innovative, culturally proficient faculty practice/ service throughout the region and beyond.
School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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Southside
Pride A Community Mobilization
Story by Rosanne Fohn
Isiaiah Pineda, Harlandale Independent School District student, participating in a Familias en Accion Community Volunteer Activity.
“Within the collective dignity, love and respect of all people, exists the wisdom and resources for a beautiful, harmonious tomorrow”—Jerry Tello
SCHOOL OF NURSING FACTS The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing has been educating nurses since 1969 and PhD students since 1990.
By Spring of 2011, nearly 400 students at the Harlandale Alternative Center will have participated in a community-based violence prevention research study being conducted through The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. The program provides culturally sensitive activities for 6th – 12th grade students at the Harlandale Independent School District’s alternative school in San Antonio, as well as an accompanying weekend program for the students’ parents and grandparents. The three-year project is funded by a grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. “Familias SUAVE: Preventing Violence with El Joven Noble (The Noble Youth) and Cara y Corazón (Face and Heart),” is being led by Janna Lesser, PhD, RN, and Manuel Angel Oscós-Sánchez, M.D. Dr. Lesser is an associate professor in the School of Nursing’s Department of Family and Community Health Services and director of the Center for Excellence, CommunityBased Health Promotion with Women and Children. Dr. Oscós-Sánchez is an associate professor in the School of Medicine’s Department of Family & Community Medicine and director of the UT Health Science Center’s Youth Development Program.
Community Collaboration Council has key role in the project Although they are co-leaders of the study, the faculty members are quick to point out that this is a community-based participatory research project that includes not only the students and their parents, but the Familias en Acción Community Collaborative Council composed of 6 TRIBUTE School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
community members, Harlandale school officials and representatives from local community organizations and agencies. “The collaborative council has major input and decision-making power to make sure that the project is meeting the needs of the community,” Dr. Oscós-Sánchez said. “We provide a framework and the council makes the decisions,” he said.
Faculty members provide methodology for the project The “framework” is a proven social action methodology that helps community groups seek input from their communities through meetings and surveys, set goals for change, devise a plan for change and then gauge the success of the program. Dr. Lesser is experienced in this specialized research. She first began working on it in the 1990s during her postdoctoral fellowship at University of California, Los Angeles. “I had the great opportunity to partner with a community-based organization that was providing innovative programs for adolescent fathers in East Los Angeles,” she said. “It was through this first project that I learned the true benefit of listening to the wise voices of the community when developing and implementing intervention research.” “It is very important that the people in the community make these decisions because it is their program and they are the ones who will benefit from it,” Dr. OscósSánchez said. In this case, the plan for change involves three curriculums, two for students and one for their families.
Discovery Project participants explain its success Juan Mancha|a parent:
Example of a Joven Noble teaching—Mascaras/Masks: This teaching is about coping with psychological injuries and how we may use a mask to survive or to cover the pain. When it is necessary to put a mask on and when is it not? When do we become the mask? The mask is a plaster mold of the young person’s face. It will have different types of decorations depending on the youth. The outside of the mask represents how the young person chooses to present himself or herself to others, the inside is reserved for important life issues that may be both personal and private.
Students assigned to one of two classes Begun in fall 2008, the 6th – 12th graders have been participating in either the El Joven Noble violence prevention class or the Teen Medical Academy, a health career promotion class, this year. “The El Joven Noble class increases insight into their intrinsic value and how what happens to them affects the people they love, like their families and intimate partners,” Dr. Lesser explained. “They learn that their decisions and life experiences are connected and that their decisions determine their future and that of their community.” The other class, the Teen Medical Academy, is a program developed and taught by Dr. Oscós-Sánchez to interest Latino students in a healthcare career. Each year the grade levels switched between the two classes.
Parents’ classes reinforce what it taught in school
“I was trained to teach Joven Noble. It has been really exciting teaching these classes. It is great that the students share their feelings and then take something out of these classes that they will use in their lives. They can become productive adults in the world even though they have so much to overcome. It is just a great program to be in.” —Gwyn Garcia, a parent
“I’m a grandmother of 11 grandchildren scattered through the school district. Our children are our tomorrow, and we need to make sure that everything is going well for them. We also started the Mujeres Nobles de Harlandale. We want all these women to bring all their knowledge, all their gifts to the table. Everything is about trying to make a difference. I am so grateful for this opportunity to make a difference for me and hopefully for a couple of other people’s tomorrows.”
Meanwhile, the students’ parents and grandparents are participating in weekend classes called Cara y Corazón. The name of the program refers to an ancient Aztec philosophy that stresses the communal responsibility to help all children develop a Wise Face and a Strong Heart as part of positive character development. This program reinforces in the home what the students are learning at school and focuses on the positive strengths of the Latino family, including the parents’ role as positive and respectful role models in a caring family structure. The study tracks the students’ behavior over the course of the study to see which program, El Joven Noble —Linda Morales, community member or the Teen Medical Academy, helps the students stay away from violence and substance abuse. Most recently, under the leadership of Drs. Lesser and Oscós-Sánchez, the Familias en Acción Community Collaborative Council successfully applied for and was awarded funding as one of the six sites of the Texas Department of State Health Services Healthy Adolescent Initiative. The goal of this four-year Familias en Acción Healthy Adolescent Initiative is to develop, implement and evaluate a locally relevant positive youth, family and community development program within the economically disadvantaged urban Latino community of Harlandale.
“We’ve started a great program here on the Southside. It has been amazing. I was invited to the second meeting of the project, and I kind of freaked out the first time I went. Here we go again, all these white people thinking that they are going to fix us, that they know what is best for us. Then after getting to hear what they had to say, it kind of brought out things that I had always wanted to do with the kids … We decided on a great program, Joven Noble. And we got to teach it. We went to a lot of classes. They taught us a lot about how to work with the kids and how to help them open up. This program has been fantastic.” Becky Gonzales|school district social worker: “A group of us went to the initial meeting. It was a leap of faith. We didn’t exactly know where the program was going, but we went with it. We liked the idea of empowering the community. We liked the idea of sustainability. We liked the idea that the community itself was going to be running the program. I’ve seen people grow and develop their leadership skills.” Daniel Pineda|project staff: “I started as a volunteer. I was brought to the project by a friend who is a social-worker at the Harlandale Alternative Center. He thought this was something that I would really believe in and would enjoy since he knew the heart I have for children in the community. I started helping out and volunteering. I was blessed with a great opportunity and was hired at the UT Health Science Center School of Nursing as a staff member for this project. It has been a tremendous journey—walking with many different families of this community—and seeing its success.” Joe Jesse Sanches|assistant superintendent: “The program, Familias en Acción, started with two PhD nurses coming to me with a great idea for an anti-violence program for children. I later realized it was more than just an anti-violence character education program. It turned out to be a community mobilization project. Before I knew it, all sorts of folks from the community—parents, community people and professional people— were coming together. I really thank Dr. Janna Lesser and her group at the UT Health Science School of Nursing. I think they have done a great job in working with us. And I feel very honestly that not only have we learned from them, but we’ve done a good job teaching them some things.”
School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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Discovery
Academic Center for Evidence-Based Practice Celebrates 10 Years of Improving Healthcare New nationwide collaboration takes research to the next level
Ten years ago, The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing launched the Academic Center for Evidence-Based Practice (ACE).
DR. KATHLEEN R. STEVENS RECENT RECOGNITION AND AWARDS * I n 2011, Dr. Stevens received one of nursing’s most prestigious research honors— Sigma Theta Tau International Episteme Award * As an Episteme Laureate, she will be inducted into the International Nurse Researcher Hall of Fame in July 2012 *T he Baxter International Foundation’s Episteme Award acknowledges a major breakthrough in the development of nursing knowledge resulting in a significant benefit to the public. Dr. Stevens is being recognized for her work in patient safety based on research
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his center of excellence was created with the tasks of improving healthcare and patient outcomes. Those who joined this national and global movement have achieved much progress over the past decade. At the annual Summer Institute on Evidence-Based Practice, Kathleen R. Stevens, RN, EdD, FAAN and her team recalled their call to action: “Healthcare is not as good as it could be, and we are here to do something about it.” These visionaries reviewed the work already done and decided on future projects to take healthcare to a level never before achieved. “In the past 10 years, the ACE team has concentrated on projects that build upon each other. This work has progressed from evidencebased community interventions to systematic reviews and from team performance for patient safety to building a national infrastructure that advances improvement science,” said Dr. Stevens, ACE founding director. To date, ACE has garnered and invested $7 million in healthcare quality and patient safety, she explained. As the ACE leaders look to the future, they have created the Improvement Science Research Network (ISRN) for the coming decade of healthcare. The ISRN is a nationwide collaboration of interprofessional clinical and academic leaders developed to generate a robust science to accelerate quality improvements in patient care. Under the direction of Dr. Stevens, who is serving as principal investigator, the ISRN is funded by a two-year, $3.1 million grant from the National Institute of Nursing Research of the National Institutes of Health. This funding is provided through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. The ISRN is guided by a steering council comprised of 15 healthcare experts from both public and private organizations together with the ISRN Coordinating Center, which is housed in the ACE at the School of Nursing. Because ACE and the ISRN Coordinating Center were founded on longstanding commitments to clinical and translational research, they have partnered with the Institute for Integration of Medicine and Science
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(IIMS) to further reduce barriers to interprofessional translational research and to strengthen the science of quality improvement. The ISRN’s cyber infrastructure will support the conduct of landmark improvement studies across multiple sites with great scientific rigor. Based on a website, the cyber infrastructure enables the virtual research center to conduct multisite network studies; expand scientific and human capacity to conduct improvement research; and accelerate dissemination of findings of improvement studies. In support of collaborative research studies across the 200 member national network, the website provides a place for secure communication, storage and sharing of documents, and data repository features for retrospective investigation. A collection of research instruments and state-of-the-science bibliographies also will be available on this website. To expand human capacity in improvement research, the ISRN offers conferences, web events, training resources, and match making between academic and clinical scholars in forming broad-based research collaboratives and expert guidance in conducting research and using statistics. As a major part of the strategic direction for research in this nascent field, the ISRN published its consensus statement on Research Priorities on the www.isrn.net website. On July 7, 2010, charter membership was opened and three national Network Research Studies were launched at the inaugural Improvement Science Summit. The three research topics are (1) frontline engagement for quality improvement, (2) preventing medication errors, and (3) team performance for patient safety. ACE has knitted the project functions throughout the IIMS for long-range sustainability and has engaged the services of Westat, Inc., of Rockville, Maryland, for support during the two-year infrastructure development. After that time, the ISRN will be co-supported by ACE and UT Health Science Center IIMS. For more information about ISRN, visit www.isrn.net or contact ISRN Project Manager Dr. Darpan Patel at pateld7@uthscsa.edu or 210-567-5813.
Diversity
Meet Our New Tenure Track Faculty Faculty: Tenure Track Adelita G. Cantu, PhD, RN Assistant Professor Dr. Cantu received her BSN from the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio, TX; her MS with a focus on community health nursing from Texas Women’s University in Dallas, TX, and her PhD in clinical nursing research from the UT Health Science Center School of Nursing. Her research interests include understanding the sociocultural context and intra person mediators of the initiation and sustainability of physical activity in older Mexican American women as well as its impact on diabetes development. Socorro Escandón, PhD, RN
Assistant Professor Dr. Socorro (Sookie) Escandón is an assistant professor in the Department of Family and Community Health Systems. Prior to joining UT Health Science Center, she served as faculty on the Research and Education teams at the University of New Mexico. She received her MS and a Doctorate of Philosophy in Nursing, with a minor in Community Based Interventions from the University of Arizona. Dr. Escandón is bicultural and bilingual and has maintained a consistent scholarly effort on health issues of English/Spanish-speaking people identified under the umbrella of Hispanic/Latino. Her investigative efforts have been concerned with (1) enhancing key health care and health maintenance knowledge/skills for young potential caregivers who anticipate caring for their elderly family members; (2) expanding a conceptual model of intergenerational caregiving among Hispanic/Latino family caregivers; (3) developing an instrument from her own qualitative data and pilot testing this proposed familism scale for intergenerational family caregivers. She has also consistently served as a resource and consultant to other researchers confronting conceptual equivalence in translation of instruments and research methods for the Hispanic/Latino population. She is active in WIN (Western Institute of Nursing Research) and serves as co-facilitator for a Latino Research Interest Group. Dr. Escandón is a Minnesota Hartford Center of Geriatric Nursing FLAG fellow. Peter Andrew Guarnero,
PhD, MN, MSc, RN Assistant Professor Dr. Guarnero received his undergraduate degree in philosophy from St. Mary’s Seminary College,
his BSN from Marcella Neihoff School of Nursing, Loyola University, Chicago, his master’s in nursing with specialization in psychiatric nursing from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and his PhD from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). Dr. Guarnero completed postdoctoral training in vulnerable populations’ research at the Center for Vulnerable Populations Research at the UCLA School of Nursing. He recently completed a master’s of science in clinical research from the University of New Mexico School of Medicine. Prior to his appointment to the UT Health Science Center School of Nursing, Dr. Guarnero was at the University of New Mexico College of Nursing where he taught in both the RN-BSN program and the traditional BSN program. He has extensive experience in qualitative methods and community based participatory research. Dr. Guarnero’s research interests focus on health promotion behaviors among men of color. Deborah Kendall-Gallagher,
JD, PhD, RN Assistant Professor Dr. Kendall-Gallagher joined the Department of Health Restoration and Care Systems Management as an assistant professor in August 2010 after completing a post-doctoral research fellowship with Dr. Linda Aiken at the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research at the University of Pennsylvania. Building on 20 years of experience in health care quality improvement, Dr. Kendall-Gallagher focuses her research efforts on clinical microsystems, health care delivery systems, and interprofessional education and practice. Dr. Kendall-Gallagher’s educational degrees include a bachelor of science degree in nursing from the University of Arizona, a doctor of jurisprudence degree from South Texas College of Law, and PhD in nursing from the University of Colorado, Denver. In addition to conducting research, Dr. Kendall-Gallagher teaches health policy, health care reform, and leadership in the master’s and doctoral programs. Carole White, PhD, RN
Associate Professor Dr. White completed her PhD in Epidemiology and Biostatistics from McGill University. She was a faculty associate in the Department of Neurology at the UT Health Science Center for 6 years where she managed an international NIH-funded secondary stroke prevention trial. She was appointed Associate Professor in the School of Nursing in 2010. Her research is focused on optimizing outcomes for stroke survivors and their family caregivers. She is conducting research on post-stroke depression and quality of life nested within the secondary stroke prevention trial. She is also undertaking research to develop and evaluate the use
of health technologies to support self-management and monitoring after stroke. Dr. White is teaching evidencebased practice methodology in the graduate program. Rosemary Walulu, PhD, RN Assistant Professor Dr. Walulu joined the school of nursing faculty in the Fall of 2010 in the Department of Family and Community Health Systems. She is a UT Health Science Center School of Nursing Alumni that has moved back to South Texas from Purdue University. Her area of research is HIV/AIDS, and she is building her science around the transition of care for HIV-infected pediatric patients to primary care. She is also conducting research on the experience of mothers living with HIV disease. Dr. Walulu is acutely interested in this research area because she is from Kenya; which has high HIV prevalence rates. She is currently teaching in the undergraduate nursing research and pediatric courses. M. Danet Lapiz-Bluhm, PhD, RN
Assistant Professor Dr. Lapiz-Bluhm originally hails from the Philippines where she finished her BSN from Cebu State College. She obtained further education and training in Biomedical Sciences (Neuroscience) as an Australian International Development Assistance Bureau merit scholar at the University of Queensland (Australia), a predoctoral trainee at the Department of Pharmacology, Karolinska Institutet (Sweden) and an international merit scholar of the Council for Vice Chancellors and Principals of UK and University of Nottingham (England, UK) for her doctoral degree (PhD) in Biomedical Sciences. She has received numerous awards for her scientific work on the effects of stress on neurobiological systems and cognition. More recently, she received the Hogg Foundation Grant for Mental Health and the Mentored Research Career Development (KL2) award in Clinical and Translational Science from the IIMS. Other than her research work, she teaches undergraduate nursing research and graduate advanced pharmacotherapeutics and promotes evidence-based practice, as well as interprofessional education towards quality of care and patient safety.
School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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FACULTY SPOTLIGHT
Norma Martinez Rogers
A Life of Service Norma Martinez Rogers, PhD, RN, FAAN, has devoted her life to service to the community. She started as a teacher in the Edgewood Independent School District and as a caseworker for San Antonio’s Catholic Family and Children Services before embarking on a career in nursing and nursing education. She has served the needs of San Antonio as a nurse, a nurse educator, and an advocate for the underserved population. Upon graduation, Dr. Martinez Rogers entered what was then known as Incarnate Word College where she earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Nursing. She went on to earn a Master’s Degree in Counseling from St. Mary’s University. In her pursuit for excellence, she earned a second Master’s Degree in Nursing from The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. For 17 years, she specialized in psychiatric nursing at a number of area hospitals before being assigned to the William Beaumont Army 10 TRIBUTE School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Medical Center at Fort Bliss, Texas, where she earned Achievement and Commendation Medals from the U.S. Army for her participation in Operation Desert Storm. Dr. Martinez Rogers then enrolled in The University of Texas at Austin where she graduated in 1995 with a PhD in Cultural Foundations. She subsequently earned two postdoctoral fellowships at Indiana University School of Nursing. In 1996 she joined the graduate faculty at the UT Health Science Center School of Nursing, where she currently serves as a professor.
Diversity
Dr. Martinez Rogers has composed more than a dozen articles which have been published in local and national publications, including “Challenges and Changes” which appears in the “Encyclopedia of Nursing Research.” She created and produced a number of plays that her undergraduate students have performed to help them incorporate theory and concepts into real-life situations. She is the founder of Juntos Podemos, a mentorship program for her students. This program began with a $5,000 stipend and just received a continuation grant from Health Resources Service Administration allowing this program to grow by more than 460 percent, and ensure 98 percent of the students in this project are academically successful. Five years ago, Dr. Martinez Rogers partnered with the U.S. Western District Court Probation Office to provide a female-specific program for women convicted of a federal felon and under community supervision. She began this program to prevent relapse and recidivism. It is the only female group in the Western District Court, and more than 150 women have successfully participated in this program. The focus of the weekly groups is to teach these women life skills, parenting skills, prevention of substance abuse, and dealing with their shame and guilt. She personally provided services such as renting facilities to hold meetings, providing food, and holding graduation ceremonies for the participants. This program has been funded by the MESA project, Alice Kleberg Reynolds Foundation to do life history interviews, the Office
On the local, state, and national levels, Dr. Martinez Rogers continues each day to make a difference. As a faculty member with the School of Nursing, she is helping to prepare students for careers in nursing. Her dedication to service continues through them. of Minority Health to develop a curriculum, and presently the Office of Women’s Health to revise and evaluate the curriculum that is based on Pick Your Pathway to Health model. In November 2006, she was selected to be a Fellow in the American Academy of Nursing (FAAN) which is the highest honor one can achieve in nursing. Nursing professionals have to be nominated by two members of the Academy and then selected by the board of the American Academy of Nursing. Dr. Martinez Rogers is the immediate past president of the National Association of Hispanic Nurses (NAHN), and during her tenure had much to celebrate. Her major goals while being president were to: 1) ensure that NAHN had a voice and visibility with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus; 2) increase the number of chapters in the United States; 3) increase recruitment and retention of members; 4) develop a national mentorship program which would be modeled after the UT Health Science Center’s
mentorship program Juntos Podemos; 5) increase partnerships/sponsorships with corporations which could provide funding for scholarships and educational programs to help eliminate Hispanic health disparities; and 6) be a spokesperson for the Hispanic community on health care reform.
During her term as president of NAHN, Dr. Martinez Rogers accomplished the following: • Increased NAHN membership by 23 percent; • Added eight chapters across the United States: ■■ Brownsville, TX ■■ Hartford, CT ■■ Corpus Christi, TX ■■ El Paso, TX ■■ McAllen, TX ■■ Savannah, GA ■■ Pueblo, CO ■■ Wichita, KS; • Obtained Fiscal Year 2010 Congressional Appropriations of $500,000 for the Juntos Podemos/NAHN Mentorship Program. This is the first-time in NAHN’s 35-year history that it has received Congressional Appropriations. This program is housed at the UT Health Science Center School of Nursing; • Formed new partnerships and collaborations with the following: ■ United Health Foundation on Avanzamos con Ayuda de United Health Scholarships ■ Kimberly Clark ■ Huggies on “Every Little Bottom Diaper Campaign” ■ Coca Cola Foundation on “Muevete USA,” aimed at reducing childhood and adolescent obesity in Hispanics ■ Gibson Guitars on “Muevete USA” ■ Pfizer on “Pfizer Health Answers,” which are National Health Guides for Hispanic medically underserved communities ■ and Pfizer on smoking cessation program for female Hispanic consumers; • Presented on several panels with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus focusing on the need for health care reform.
She also is on the Board of Directors for the National Coalition of Ethnic Minority Nurses Association. She recently was appointed by the U.S. Government Accountability Office to be a member of the Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Payment and Access Commission (MACPAC) which will examine how Medicaid physician pay affects access to care by Medicaid patients and those in CHIP as well as other issues. Dr. Martinez Rogers was nominated by Dr. Mary Wakefield to be a member of the National Advisory Council of the National Health Service Corps. She was selected by its members to be on this Council. The Council’s purpose is to help eliminate health manpower shortages in health professional shortage areas. On the local, state and national levels, Dr. Martinez Rogers continues each day to make a difference. As a faculty member with the School of Nursing, she is helping to prepare students for careers in nursing. Her dedication to service continues on through them. School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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NURSING ALUMNI. WH
UPDATE YOUR INFORMATION MAKELIVESBETTER.UTHSCSA.EDU 12 TRIBUTE School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Diversity
. WHERE ARE THEY NOW? The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing is a significant component of the only Tier 1 research university in South Texas. We are creating excellence in nursing leadership through our innovative teaching, quality research, compassionate care and community service. • The only UT System school in the South Texas region to offer doctorate nursing degrees • Between 17% – 18% of our nursing students are male • More than 54% represent the following groups: Hispanic, African American, Native American, Asian, and other groups • More than 10,000 alumni have received degrees since 1969* • 90% of graduates employed upon graduation • And graduation rate is 82.7% —ranking us 8th out of 25 schools of nursing in the state of Texas • Since fall 2000, School of Nursing has offered over $450,000 annually in Merit and Need Based Scholarships • More than 300 clinical affiliates (clinical rotation partners)
AND CLOSE TO HOME * Whereas more than 10,000 alumni have received degrees from the Nursing School, current locations are not known for all of those still living. ** Atascosa, Bandara, Boerne, Bulverde, Canyon Lake, Castroville, Cibolo, Comfort, Converse, Devine, Dilley, Fair Oaks Ranch, Floresville, Garden Ridge, Helotes, Kerrville, LaCoste, Lakehills, Lavernia, Lytle, Marion, Medina, Mico, Natalia, New Braunfels, Pearsall, Pipecreek, Pleasanton, Rio Medina, Schertz, Seguin, Spring Branch School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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DETERMINATION TO SUCCEED From migrant field work to nursing When I was a little girl, I used to dream about being a lawyer or a teacher because I wanted to make a difference in the world. These professionals looked so impressive in their business attire. I imagined them having sophisticated conversations with other sophisticated people. They drove their fancy cars into the fancy garages of their summer vacation homes. That world was far from the reality of my childhood as a migrant field worker. My daydreams of a different world were interrupted by the incessant mosquitoes that tormented me underneath the tall weeds in the fields. If that didn’t get me back to reality, the sound of my mother’s voice telling me to get back to work would. I spent half the school year in Texas, and the other half in the northern states working the family business as a migrant field worker. I hated it back then, and I sure let my mother know. I complained that everyone else had summers off school, and everyone else was able to finish the entire school year but I wasn’t. I wanted to be a cheerleader, but cheer camp occurred in Texas during the summer, and I was always working up north. My mother came from generation after generation of migrant workers, and it was all she knew. Back then, it was a way of life, and the family worked together to survive. She was one of 16 children who were all pulled out of elementary school to make a living working year round. My mother reinforced the fact it was hard work but it was honest. She also said if I didn’t want to end up doing it for the rest of my life, it would take a good education and determination to succeed. With that job I didn’t see my single mom ever driving a fancy car into a fancy garage, and this definitely wasn’t a summer vacation. I knew that life wasn’t for me, and this is where the dream began. There would be many obstacles to overcome to achieve my dreams. I am fortunate I was able to rise above many challenges. As a child, I was a victim of abuse which, unfortunately, showed me how to be just that—a victim. Even though I helped to stop the abuse and the abuser was sentenced for his crimes, it didn’t change how helpless and powerless I felt. There was so much taken from me that I can never fully explain it. As far as I was concerned, the only thing I had that nobody could take was my brain and my heart and their contents: knowledge and desire. However, more emotional and physical challenges were ahead of me. I fell in love in junior high and had a baby with my boyfriend just before high school graduation. He was not ready to be a father or have a family. I still had a brain and a heart, but now I had a baby to raise. This was in 2000 and I was 17. My mother said it was my choice so it was my responsibility—not hers. I made the trip with my mother to the northern states one more time. With the first $400 I made working the fields, I bought a 1977 Ford Maverick, a bright tan clunker that looked like a banana. 14 TRIBUTE School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
During this time, I also managed to win a battle against uterine cancer with modern technology, medicine and surgery. This experience gave me so much respect for health care and all it entails because someone’s life depends on it. The bright tan banana clunker took us back to the Texas border: Crystal City, where the only “good” jobs were teaching and nursing. At that time, I couldn’t see myself teaching because I did not enjoy the learning process. I was easily frustrated in classrooms because I had a difficult time sitting still long enough. I later was diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. ADHD was another hurdle to overcome. I then began my education to become a nurse. I worked two jobs —as a substitute teacher and a beverage barn server—and went to school. During this time, I had also fallen in love and had a very premature baby boy at 28 weeks. Desire and determination allowed me to graduate about four weeks later with my licensed vocational nurse degree in 2006. I quickly realized I could only do so much with that license so I applied to San Antonio College’s associate degree in nursing program and was accepted through one of the last distance learning classes available. It was there that a very special instructor, Joan Garcia, noticed my niche, which is my deep passion for teaching my patients. She talked about where nursing stood in terms of education and why I needed to further my education. This twominute conversation had a very lasting effect on me. After graduation, I was sitting at my charge nurse desk browsing the web for suggestions on management of a rare disorder to better understand my patient’s needs when my ADHD got the best of me, and I looked up The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. This is something Joan suggested to me six months before. I saw they were accepting applications for the Master of Science in Nursing program. It is as though it was calling out to me personally. Like it was there for just me. It didn’t cost much to apply, and I used the money I saved for a concert to pay for the application. I was so thrilled when I was accepted. Experiences we live through are the ones that shape who we become, and people who enter our lives do so for a particular reason. Everything I have lived through has led me to nursing. It has made me who I am today. I can’t tell you how much I love what I do, how I love my patients, and how I love to teach. I can’t tell you if I am perfect for this or whether this is perfect for me. I can tell you that it did take desire, drive and sacrifice. I also can tell you that every drop of sweat was worth the trip here to The University of Texas Health Science Center. This is where I belong.
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Diversity
Experiences we live through are the ones that shape who we become, and people who enter our lives do so for a particular reason. Everything I have lived through has led me to nursing. It has made me who I am today.”
Experiences we live through are the ones that shape who we become, and people who enter our lives do so for a particular reason. Everything I have lived through has led me to nursing. It has made me who I am today.”
School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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Diversity
New Accelerated BSN Track Accelerates Students, Transforms Health Care (LEFT TO RIGHT) Whitney Higgins, Cristina Lopez and Ruth Gonzales—all currently pursuing the accelerated Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree —are greatly enjoying their program of studies at the School of Nursing.
Story by Brandy Allred Academic & Student Services Coordinator
SCHOOL OF NURSING FACTS Our Programs include: *A n upper division Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) degree program which admits in both the fall and spring *A 15-month Accelerated Track for applicants who hold a baccalaureate degree in a field other than nursing *A lternate Entry Masters Degree for ADN/Diploma RNs *T he only PhD in Nursing Program in South Texas *W eb enhanced programs
To meet the growing demand for nurses, nursing programs across the nation are creating and adapting their pre-licensure programs to attract individuals with diverse backgrounds to the field of nursing. As part of this effort, the School of Nursing has implemented a new Accelerated BSN track to the undergraduate program in May 2010. The new track represents the continued efforts by the School of Nursing to transform health care and to meet the need for more nurses. This new fifteen month program is designed to assist individuals who currently have a Bachelor of Science degree in a field other than nursing to transition quickly and effectively into nursing careers. Additionally, the track is designed to meet the needs of such students who have demonstrated success in a field other than nursing through the use of learner-centered, technology enhanced learning experiences. While maintaining current enrollments, the newly revised Traditional BSN Track Program, the new Accelerated BSN track will annually produce an additional 70 to 80 nurses bringing School of Nursing total annual enrollments above 320.
Individuals are able to graduate approximately nine months faster than Traditional Track students. This allows them to enter the workforce more quickly.
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The School of Nursing has offered an accelerated track in the undergraduate program for approximately three years; however, the program was a hybridized section of the Traditional BSN track. Revisions to the accelerated track were designed in response to student feedback who had completed the hybridized track. Additionally, this model for educating second degree students has also been implemented at other nursing schools across the nation. Those schools have reported this model to be an effective and efficient method for bringing new nurses into the profession more quickly. Specifically, many schools report that graduates of their accelerated tracks score higher on the national nursing licensure examination (NCLEX-RN). Identical material is covered in both the Accelerated BSN Track and in the Traditional BSN Track, but the Accelerated BSN Track offers a greater use of technology to facilitate learning. Furthermore, clinical hours are more concentrated than in the traditional track. Individuals interested in the Accelerated BSN Track are admitted and graduated during the summer semesters. Because students are in classes and clinicals five days per week and are expected to participate in self-directed independent study during off hours, students are discouraged from working during this program. While students in the Accelerated BSN Track are not able to work, there are many advantages to this program. They are able to graduate approximately nine months faster than Traditional Track students. This allows them to enter the workforce more quickly. Also, students are able to develop a more intensive relationship with faculty because they are with dedicated faculty for the duration of the program. If you have further questions regarding the new Accelerated BSN Track Program, please visit the School of Nursing website: nursing.uthscsa.edu.
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Our Blueprint to Transform the Future of Nursing Care: In 2009, Dean Eileen T. Breslin, PhD, RN, of the School of Nursing initiated a campaign focused on developing partnerships to: q Increase enrollment of outstanding students, q Recruit, retain and educate distinguished faculty,
Increase Enrollment of Outstanding Students Through a $3.9 million grant awarded by the Methodist Healthcare Ministries, $2.7 million is allocated for faculty and curriculum specialists to design and teach three new degree programs including: • An Accelerated Baccalaureate of Science in Nursing (ABSN) for students who have a bachelor’s degree in another field and wish to join the nursing profession. The program began in May 2010 with 60 students. Nurses with a bachelor’s degree provide bedside care and fill entry-level management positions in hospitals. • An Accelerated Online Master’s Degree for nurses with an associate’s degree in nursing. This program will begin in 2011. Nurses with a master’s degree can advance their careers in hospitals, become clinical faculty members or enter the research fields. • A Doctorate in Nursing Practice (DNP) degree to provide highly educated clinical nursing specialists, executive leaders and clinical faculty members, an additional $150,000 in scholarships for DNP students. This program will begin in Fall 2012. In addition, these funds were received to support the above programs: • In addition, $816,600 was received through the U.S. Department of Education to increase our PhD student enrollment by providing full scholarships to our students, and $1,425,600 was received from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) for advancing nursing education. • $1,425,600 from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) for advance nursing education.
q Expand nursing research excellence, q Broaden nursing curriculum and innovative teaching approaches, and q Update our academic environment— facilities, technology and laboratories. Today, our blueprint for nursing education is becoming a reality. Through the generosity of individuals, foundations and corporations and the scholarly efforts of our faculty, we have accomplished much.
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing Enrollment Totals 695 625 559
275
258
279
2007 – 08
2008 – 09
2009 – 10
■ BACCALAUREATE NURSING 18 TRIBUTE School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
■ GRADUATE NURSING
Delivery
Recruit, Retain and Educate Distinguished Faculty
Expand Nursing Research Excellence
School of Nursing received a $100,000 gift from the Estate of Howard Halff to provide scholarships to current School of Nursing faculty obtaining doctorate degrees. Additional funding for this program is provided by the UT Health Science Center Nursing Advisory Council.
The School of Nursing received $1,481,205 of National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding to support the Office of Nursing Research and Scholarship’s program: Mechanisms for Enhancing Scholarly Achievements (MESA). A $3.1 million grant for quality and safety education, research and clinical collaborations was awarded to the Academic Center for Evidence Based Practice from the UT System. This funding will propel the partnership between TeamSTEPPS, which is a national teamwork system designed for health care professionals, and its partner hospital University Hospital. The intent is to address needs for excellence in clinical education and professional development in teamwork training directed toward patient safety.
Broaden Nursing Curriculum and Innovative Teaching Approaches
Update Our Academic Environment —Facilities, Technology and Laboratories
Through the $3.9 million grant awarded by the Methodist Healthcare Ministries, $235,000 was allocated for computer equipment, software, enhancements to the university’s distance education program, and miscellaneous expenses to support robust online learning programs in the School of Nursing To support integrating practice approaches across our curriculum, the School of Nursing was awarded a $300,000 HRSA grant titled “Developing Informatics Competency in Nursing Students.” This grant will allow 696 graduate and undergraduate students to be trained to use Electronic Health Records equipment. The Ruth Ann Baldwin Endowment for Nursing Education: a $100,000 endowment was established in the Clinical Skills and Simulation Center to support education and growth within this Center.
A state-of-the-art clinical skills and simulation center is being constructed within the School of Nursing for use by nursing, medical and other health professionals throughout South Texas through a: • $850,000 gift from Methodist Healthcare Ministries • $1 million grant from the Economic Development Administration • $750,000 in construction support from University Health System • $500,000 in equipment support from KCI • $100,000 gift from Donna Block • $25,000 gift from Patricia Pliego Stout • $25,000 gift from the Nursing Advisory Council • $290,000 grant from HRSA to support the Educational Management System within the Clinical Skills and Simulation Center. School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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School of Nursing student embrace Hilda Mejia Abreu, BA, MS, Associate Dean for Admissions and Student Services.
Admissions & Student Services Advancing Health Care, One Student at a Time The nursing profession is at a juncture in the preparation of future health care professionals at the undergraduate and graduate levels. To address the growing shortage of nursing and rigorously prepare students to be successful in their nursing careers, the Office of Admissions and Student Services (OASS) provides services in a learner-centered environment to prospects interested in a nursing career. The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing is placed in a unique setting. Situated in the heart of South Texas and located within a health science center which encourages interdisciplinary approaches to teaching, learning, and service, the mission of the OASS is to recruit, retain, and graduate the best and the brightest. Additionally, the OASS prides itself in providing the best service in one location to prospective applicants, enrolled students, faculty members and constituents. Such services allow an easier transition from prospect to student. These support services also supplement the students’ educational experience as they transition into exceptional health care providers. Service is what the OASS strives to provide each and every day. The five staff members in the OASS are responsible for recruitment, retention and graduation of School of Nursing students. Office members organize monthly open houses to distribute information regarding the admissions process to prospective students, visit middle schools, high schools and colleges to engage prospective undergraduate and graduate applicants. It is the team’s goal to provide important information about the science preparation and application process to prospective applicants. Additionally, information is presented about the curriculum and the nursing profession. The OASS works closely with faculty
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members in the selection process of all undergraduate and graduate applicants to the School of Nursing traditional BSN, Accelerated BSN, MSN and PhD programs. The OASS staff members are charged with orchestrating relevant and efficient orientation programs for all incoming students. Many of our students have been away from school for a while, and the three-day orientation program is critical to students’ success. A variety of sessions provide information and expectations of School of Nursing students. During orientation, current students and faculty work closely with incoming students to share the support mechanisms available to them as students. Continuous support is also provided to School of Nursing students: writing assistance, career services, scholarships, leadership training activities, student organizations, and soon, a new tutorial programs (funded through Federal Work Study funds). The tutorial program has 10 tutors that provide services to enrolled students who are facing academic challenges. In addition to providing tutorial services, the tutee will work as a quasi teacher with compensation. This opportunity will allow students who have considered teaching to navigate the world of education while continuing with the next step in their career of pursuing graduate education. The School of Nursing is committed to retaining admitted students and continuing a relationship with students beyond graduation. Students who have previously graduated also benefit from the OASS notification of employment opportunities and receive the School of Nursing Alumni Magazine with the majority of stories written by OASS employees. The OASS goal is to nurture prospective and enrolled nursing students in a learner-centered environment with available services housed in one location.
Delivery
Practice & Engagement Building Interdisciplinary Healthcare Teams of the Future In September 2009, The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio created the Office of Practice and Engagement (OPE) by hiring Julie Cowan Novak, DNSc, RN, MA, CPNP, FAANP, as the first Associate Dean for Practice and Engagement. The practice and engagement mission integrates discovery, diversity and delivery, she explains. “Our developing clinic system provides a research and learning laboratory where evidence-based practice and education occur. The UT Nursing Clinical Enterprise is creating an accessible, caring, high quality, culturally proficient, and effective health care delivery system for individuals, families and communities,” Dr. Novak said. Clinical Enterprise services include the UT Health Science Center Student Health Center (SHC), the UT Health Science Center Employee Health and Wellness Clinic, and community clinics servicing chronic disease management, behavioral health, services for underserved populations, and a wide range of global health care initiatives.
Student Health Center
The SHC has been run by the School of Nursing since 2007. In September 2009, the SHC expanded from two to four exam rooms and from to two to seven faculty advanced practice nurses to improve the system of care and to expand clinical sites and faculty practice opportunities. This learning laboratory allows students and faculty to understand the business of healthcare while creating an effective, safe and high-quality nurse-managed system of care.
Employee Wellness
Due to the success of the SHC, documented need, faculty expertise, and access to research populations, the OPE/UT Nursing Clinical Enterprise was invited and agreed to create an Employee Health and Wellness/ Occupational Health Clinic. Dr. Novak created a rendering in collaboration with facilities management/university architects. The proposal was "fast tracked" and completed in November 2010. Since opening in November, there has been much success including a student, faculty and staff event to launch a series of health promotion and disease prevention initiatives in the Fall 2010 and Women’s Health Awareness Week in May 2011. Planning for the future, there is hope for increased collaboration with the Behavioral Health Department for the UT Health Science Center and the opportunity to collaborate with UT Medicine in the newly constructed Medical Arts and Research Center.
External Activities
Engagement activities external to the university have occurred in several areas. The AVANCE, Inc Clinic is part of the Early Head Start program and two faculty, pediatric nurse practitioners are serving as care providers. Through the pediatric nurse practitioner (PNP) program, AVANCE is a learning laboratory for our students. The success of this program has led to a request from Head Start to expand the model to other San Antonio Head Start facilities. Five health homes are being created by the UT Nursing Clinical Enterprise in partnership with Head Start. The San Antonio Independent School district has asked Novak and her team to create the health home model for their district. A $7 million proposal has been submitted and if funded, the model will provide a nurse-managed clinic (NMC) health home at each of the eight SAISD high schools. The second established site is Healy Murphy Alternative High School and Day Care Center. Two faculty APNs are developing faculty practice sites in this setting and expanding operations to create a nurse-managed health home. These will serve as clinical learning sites under the Office of Practice and Engagement/UT Nursing Clinical Enterprise. Through a HRSA grant, electronic health records will be linked to AVANCE and Healy Murphy Clinics with the UT Health Science Center Health Centers (employee and student). All of these nurse managed clinics provide care for designated Medically Underserved Populations. In planning for the future, the third component of the external Clinical Enterprise will be private practice contracts and industry partnerships. These initiatives are in the developmental phase.
Associate Dean Julie Novak, a pediatric nurse, brings her compassionate heart to the care she gives her young patients.
Julie Cowan Novak, DNSc, RN, MA, CPNP, FAANP, serves as the Associate Dean for Practice, holds the Thelma and Joe Crow Endowed Professorship, and serves as the director of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio Student Health Center at the UT Nursing San Antonio Clinical Enterprise. She was previously professor at Purdue University School of Nursing and served as Director of the Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Program. She also served as the director of the Purdue School of Nursing Clinics and as director of the Service Learning Innovation and Scholarship in the Center for Instructional Excellence. Dr. Novak has held leadership positions at the University of Virginia Schools of Nursing and Medicine and the University of California San Diego/University of California San Francisco Intercampus Graduate Studies Division and Department of Community and Family Medicine. School of Nursing faculty nurse practitioners lead and manage the clinics. They have the authority to write prescriptions and are nationally certified in their specialties and licensed by the Texas Board of Nursing. Nursing faculty members who provide care at the Employee Health and Wellness Center and the Student Health Center include: • Bridget Slattery MSN, RN, FNP-BC, the lead nurse practitioner • Diana Beckmann-Mendez, PhD, RN, FNP-BC • Margaret Brackley, RN, PhD, PMHCNS-BC, FPMHNP-BC, FNP-BC, FAANP, FAAN • Holly DiLeo, PhD, RN, FNP-BC • Margit B. Gerardi, PhD, RN, WHNP • Rita Hannah, MSN, RN, FNP-C • Deborah Pallister, MSN, RN, FNP-C • Ada Tapper, MSN, RN, FNP-C • Candace Tull, MSN, RN, WHNP-BC
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Delivery
Dr. Nancy McGowan, assistant professor at The University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio School of Nursing and Ms. Pakamas Boonyaphisompan (Moin), Chiang Mai University.
Bridging Oceans:
Expanding the Pipeline Abroad Story by Brandy Allred Academic & Student Services Coordinator
After Dr. Eileen Breslin, Dean of the School of Nursing, visited Thailand’s Chiang Mai University Hospital in May 2009, Pakamas Boonyaphisompan, a Thai nurse of 19 years, knew she wanted to observe firsthand the educational curriculum at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing and the services provided by University Hospital. Countless emails, documents and a few international phone calls later, Pakamas became the first international visiting nurse to the School of Nursing.
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Pakamas’ personal conviction to help Chiang Mai University Hospital become a center of excellence for cardiovascular services is sponsored by the Chiang Mai University Hospital. She will observe University Hospital’s processes and practices in an effort to improve the quality of services provided by Chiang Mai Hospital. Specifically, she has been commissioned by the Chiang Mai University Hospital to focus on understanding how University Hospital’s process from patient entrance to exit works and how this process may be implemented into the Thai setting. When Pakamas arrived on January 22, 2009, she was greeted by Hilda MejiaAbreu, Associate Dean for Admissions & Student Services at the School of Nursing. Ms. Abreu aided Pakamas in searching for an apartment, opening a checking account, and being cleared by the Office of International Services as an official visitor to the UT Health Science Center. Pakamas considered this portion of her journey to be extremely easy and credits her smooth transition to the School of Nursing admissions team. Less than one week after arriving here, Pakamas found herself in University Hospital shadowing nurses on 12-hour shifts. When not observing hospital practices, she would visit the Office of Admissions & Student Services to learn more about the curriculum and the training future nurses receive at the School of Nursing. As she points out, for Chiang Mai University Hospital to become a center of excellence, every dimension to the hospital also must exhibit the highest level of excellence. Pakamas elaborates, “Though the hospital process can be improved, without quality nurses to implement and adhere to the process, Chiang Mai Hospital cannot be a center of excellence for cardiovascular services.” Pakamas was a visiting nurse at the UT Health Science Center and University Hospital until April 2010.
Development
Nursing Advisory Council members Barbara Wulfe and Donna Block with PhD student Charles Reed at the 2011 School of Nursing Scholarship Luncheon.
Connecting With The Community To Make Lives Better
Some of the most critically ill patients in the ICU are experiencing better outcomes because of protocols implemented by health care teams led by School of Nursing alumnus Charles Reed, MSN, RN, CNRN.
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Reed, a graduate of the School of Nursing at the UT Health Science Center at San Antonio’s BSN and MSN programs, is the patient care coordinator in the Surgical Trauma/Neurosurgical Intensive Care Unit at University Hospital in San Antonio. Thanks to a generous $5,000-a-year scholarship from The Barbara Wulfe Living Endowment, Reed is currently pursuing his PhD in the School of Nursing and said his education allows him to directly help improve the health care of seriously ill patients. His research on improving life expectancy of ICU patients through glycemic control was published in an issue of the Journal of the American College of Surgeons. “I love what I do because I am able to impact practice and make a difference in patients’ lives through nursing. My research translates into better service for patients,” Reed said. “I’m especially grateful for the Wulfe scholarship that allows me to continue to pursue my career goals and to be a positive change agent. I wouldn’t be able to accomplish this without Mr. and Mrs. Wulfe’s financial assistance.”
Gifts vital to the future of nursing Eileen Breslin, PhD, RN, FAAN, School of Nursing dean, said support from donors and the community is more important than ever to the education of future nurses. “We are thankful for the tremendous legislative support our School of Nursing receives,” Dean Breslin said. “However, recent state budget cuts have affected institutions of higher education across the nation including our own programs. So we are very grateful to the generosity and leadership of our donors who will help us keep the cost of education down for students in the future.” In 2010, Methodist Healthcare Ministries of South Texas Inc. (MHM) awarded a grant of $3.9 million over three years to the School of Nursing. Last year, the grant accounted for 7.2 percent of the School of Nursing’s budget for faculty salaries and new equipment. Pilar Oates, executive director of MHM, said the foundation board understands the importance of educating nurses locally for the future. “We are keenly aware of the nursing shortage in our service area,” Oates said. “Methodist Healthcare Ministries was looking for ways it could help produce more nurses who would remain in South Texas to practice. We found that the UT Health Science Center’s School of Nursing was the right partner to help us accomplish this goal.” 24 TRIBUTE School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
The nursing profession is one of the most critical and respected professions in the health care industry. With the national move toward healthcare reform, nursing schools across the country, according to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, are struggling to expand educational programs and training to meet the rising demand for top-notch professionals. Applications to the School of Nursing’s undergraduate program, in 2010 – 2011, totaled 1,142 with 328 students admitted that year, an increase of 88 students. But with an estimated $2 million annual budget shortfall in tuition reimbursement, the need for additional teaching and learning space, and continued growth in its graduate nursing programs, the school will be relying on philanthropy and community partnerships to meet the needs. “We have extremely generous scholarship support and an exemplar curriculum, however we must keep the cost of education affordable to all students while continuing to provide state-of-the-art teaching and learning facilities and curriculum,” Dean Breslin said.
Rising to the challenge Faculty and administrators in the School of Nursing are finding innovative ways to finance the rising cost of education. One of those is through the UT Nursing Clinical Enterprise. The enterprise consists of clinics located throughout the city and are led by nurse practitioners who work in collaboration with the School of Medicine’s UT Medicine San Antonio physicians. The clinics provide care to more than 11,600 adults and children each year. In 2009, Dean Breslin recruited Julie Novak, DNSc, RN, MA, CPNP, FAANP, to develop and direct the clinical enterprise, designed to stimulate income-producing community partnerships. “It’s very similar to how the university’s School of Medicine earns income from its clinical practice at its clinical home, the Medical Arts & Research Center (MARC),” Dean Breslin said. “The enterprise builds revenue for the School of Nursing while putting nurses into the community doing what they do best: promoting, maintaining and restoring health.” Dr. Novak, who also is associate dean for practice and engagement in the School of Nursing, said nurse-managed clinics across the country can fail if they rely on a single grant. “Instead, we’re striving for a diverse basis of support through billing as well as foundation, state and federal grants, and through philanthropy and other federal programs,” she said. “This is a national model for establishing a clinical enterprise within a nursing school, and community partnerships are vital to our success.” Another example of how the School of Nursing is garnering support is through its Nursing Advisory Council (NAC). Established with eight members in 1983, the NAC has grown to more than 50 active members who are distinguished leaders from throughout San Antonio and the South Texas community. Their focus is to promote
SCHOOL OF NURSING BUDGET BREAKDOWN The notion that tuition and funding from the state covers the cost of nursing education is simply not true. “We are partially funded by the state through a formula funding process as recommended by a biennial Formula Advisory Committee for consideration by the Commissioner of the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.” said Rudy Gomez Jr., assistant dean for administration and School of Nursing financial officer for 30 years, “However this formula doesn’t begin to cover all the expenses.”
Budget crunch • Increase in BSN applicants—328 applicants accepted out of 1,142 in 2010 – 2011 • BSN undergraduate admissions increase from 240 in 2009 – 2010 to 328 in 2010 – 2011 —37 percent increase • Cost to educate one full-time undergraduate student—$10,000 a year • Cost to educate one full-time graduate student—$16,000
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I’m especially grateful for the Wulfe scholarship that allows me to continue to pursue my career goals and to be a positive change agent. I wouldn’t be able to accomplish this without Mr. and Mrs. Wulfe’s financial assistance.” Charles Reed
• $2 million annual budget shortfall in tuition reimbursement • In FY 2011, the cost to operate the School of Nursing—state funds represent 40.5 percent of total revenue; FY 2012 forecast of state funding is 33 percent • Nursing Shortage Reduction Program from the Texas Legislature funds represent 2.4 percent of the School of Nursing budget • Ratio of faculty to students in the undergraduate program—1 faculty-to-10 students. In the graduate program it is 1 faculty-to-6 students
Blueprint for success The School of Nursing at the UT Health Science Center offers: • An upper division Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) degree program that admits in both the fall and spring; • A 15-month Accelerated Track for applicants who hold a baccalaureate degree in a field other than nursing; • Alternate Entry Master’s Degree for ADN/ Diploma RNs; • A Doctorate of Nursing Practice DNP program; • The only PhD in Nursing program in South Texas; • Web-enhanced programs; • All nurse practitioner faculty maintain a faculty practice; • An overall National Certified Licensing Board (NCLEX) pass rate is greater than the national norm; • A graduation rate of 82.7 percent—ranking the school 8 out of 25 schools of nursing in Texas; • Designation as a Hispanic Serving Institution; and • Construction of a 7,281 square foot Virtual Hospital equipped with state-of-the-art simulation mannequins that is set for completion in 2012.
Development
excellence in educational and nursing care programs through fundraising activities, and to establish partnerships with local organizations toward increased community visibility for the School of Nursing. Every member of the NAC plays an integral role in the school’s success. Their commitment to making lives better has driven more than $6 million in endowments, capital improvements, and programs to the School of Nursing. Not only is the NAC working closely with the Office of Development to raise money, it is also committed to developing a pipeline of faculty to educate students. Just as the Barbara Wulfe Scholarship is assisting Charles Reed to pursue his PhD in the School of Nursing, many of the NAC members are supporting students and faculty who are interested in returning to the school to achieve their terminal degree and return to teaching. “The major barrier in increasing the student body of all nursing schools is a shortage of qualified nursing faculty,” Dean Breslin said. “Regardless of the budget cuts, we must continue to grow and develop our faculty pipeline.” Through the school’s annual luncheon, hosted by the NAC, the school raises close to $60,000 annually, which benefits the school in the form of faculty scholarships and grants.
Continuing the momentum “It’s wonderful to know that there are people in the city who are so generous and caring,” Reed said. “Their scholarship gifts help alleviate a lot of stress for students like me, and it gives me confidence knowing that someone really believes in my success.” Many members of the NAC were also instrumental in establishing a longstanding partnership between the School of Nursing and Methodist Healthcare Ministries of South Texas Inc. (MHM), which helped lead to the $3.9 million gift MHM made in 2010. “Because of our faculty, NAC and the community, our School of Nursing is experiencing great success,” Dean Breslin said. “But to continue this momentum, it will take more leadership and support from our community than ever before. We are so grateful to those who are ensuring an exceptional School of Nursing in San Antonio and South Texas for generations to come.” For more information about giving opportunities in the School of Nursing or to join the Nursing Advisory Council, call (210) 567-5313 or e-mail lowea@uthscsa.edu. School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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Nursing Advisory Council
The Bridge to the Community Since 1983, the Nursing Advisory Council (NAC) has been dedicated to one crucial mission for the School of Nursing.
SCHOOL OF NURSING FACTS
500+ Number of undergraduate nursing students
250+ Number of graduate nursing students
18% Percentage of School of Nursing students that are male
Over 54% represent the following groups: Hispanic, African American, Native American, Asian, and other groups
300+ clinical affiliates (clinical rotation partners)
Over 10,000 alumni have received degrees since 1969 *
13 Fellows of the American Academy of Nursing (FAAN)
The NAC is the bridge to the community to generate financial resources, influence awareness, and develop partnerships that enhance and support the School of Nursing and its undergraduate and graduate degree programs. At this time, Gregg Muenster, vice president of US Trust/Bank of America, chairs the council and its 51 active members and 18 emeriti members. This group is comprised of 45 percent business executives, 43 percent nurses and each with unique community connections and interests in nursing. The incredible success of these NAC members begins with a carefully created and organized strategic plan. Their blueprint for success has truly allowed them to take their support to a previously unforeseen level. Their plan has five important goals. Goal 1 NAC’s first goal is to gain financial support for the School of Nursing. In 2006, the council helped the school to raise approximately $2 million in cash gifts, in-kind donations, pledged gifts, endowments and known estate gift pledges. By 2010, this annual amount has increased to a record $6.52 million. Goal 2 The council’s second goal is create opportunities to engage nurses and to improve public awareness of the importance of nursing, nursing education and the School of Nursing. The NAC members concentrated on organizing three varied events to achieve this goal: • Dialogue and Discovery Dinners hosted by NAC members in their homes for potential donors. The dinners allowed the guests to meet the Nursing Dean and to learn about the School of Nursing. • One-on-One Corporate Meetings set up by NAC members with presidents/CEOs of companies not currently involved with the School of Nursing. • Community Social Events held at NAC members’ homes for 80 to 100 members of the community. These events allowed community members who were not previously familiar with the School of Nursing to learn about the exciting educational, research and nursing practice programs currently going on at the school and throughout the community.
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Goal 3 NAC members have set their third goal as actively serving as informed advocates in appropriate public and private forums. With the upcoming 2011 Texas Legislative Session, council members will concentrate on legislative matters of importance to the School of Nursing. These issues include budgetary cuts, infrastructure issues, student enrollment topics, and advance practice nurse privileges. In partnership with the The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio Governmental Affairs Office, the NAC will develop a list of legislative priorities, schedule appointments with legislators and community members who influence such decisions, and travel to Austin in the spring for the Legislative Session. Goal 4 In its fourth goal to support school events and activities, the council members are dedicated to the Annual School of Nursing Luncheon. This large fundraising luncheon provides speakers discussing the state of nursing and healthcare across the country. Funds raised from the event go back to the School of Nursing as grants and scholarships to faculty and students. In 2009 – 2010, the NAC awarded almost $48,000 in funding through this event. By increasing attendance and heightening corporate support, in 2011, the Spring Luncheon reached a new high in raising close to $67,000 and hosting 350 guests. Goal 5 As its final goal, NAC members concentrate on building relationships to attract, support and retain outstanding students, faculty, staff and administrators to the school. This is being accomplished through: • Faculty research support, • Faculty scholarships, • Fall student scholarships, • Student emergency scholarships, and • Summer student scholarships. While the Nursing Advisory Council has achieved great results, it continues to work on each of the goals outlined above. The council’s continued success is important to the future of the School of Nursing. As the community supports the school, the school is able to create nursing professionals who care for area residents needing healthcare at a variety of settings. It is a cycle of success that continues each day.
Development
2011 – 2012 NAC Members & Emeriti Gregg E. Muenster, Chair Members Laura Alvarado Kristi Arlitt Martha Avant Estella Avery Kay Bashara Harold E. Batiste, Jr. Donna Block Evelyn Boaz Katherine Bullard Carolina Canales Phyllis Chelette Graciela Cigarroa
Helen Coronado Karen Diaz Robin Ford Dillard Marcy Doderer Veronica Edwards John Fuentes Walton Gregory Barbara Haley Betty Halff Mary Henrich Karen Heizer Herrmann Jennifer Hsu Anne Magers Kanter Sandy Klein Allison Kustoff
Hector Ledesma, Jr. Deborah Lewis Nancy Loeffler Janey B. Marmion Jennifer Moriarty Amparo Ortiz Judy Palans Loretta Patterson Bill Rasco Ann B. Richardson Lorena Rodriguez Douglas Schroeder Joanie Schwartz Harry Smith Yvonne Speer
Patricia Pliego Stout Carol Swartz Dana Terracina Lewis Thorne Wendy Tillotson Marilyn Weber Maria Wellisch Tina York Emeriti Patty L. Hawken Robin Ancira Louise Beldon Erin Bowman Rosemary Breedlove
Toni Goldsmith Anthony Hargrove Earline Lagueruela Nancy Miller Maria Cristina Rodriguez Phyllis Siegel Marie Smith Marilyn Stanton-White Delight Tillotson Sue Turner Neill Walsdorf, Sr. Linda S. Winston Barbara Wulfe
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Supporting the Next Generation Jenna Reynolds, undergraduate nursing student and Fred Petmecky, Volunteer President for the San Antonio Stock Show and Rodeo (SALE) at the 2011 SALE scholarship luncheon.
Exceptional, successful, close knit, generous, and notable are just a few of the adjectives regularly used to describe donors to The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio School of Nursing. Individually and collectively, donors to the UT Health Science Center School of Nursing have taken the attitude of making significant contributions to enhance and support the next generation of professional nurses. They have enriched and improved the lives of both students and future patients and people across Texas and the United States with their support of student scholarships. This is a tribute to donors and their generosity. More than $300,000 is provided via endowed and annual scholarships that assist students to defray tuition, fees and other incidental expenses. In the past year, more than 300 School of Nursing students have continued and completed their education due to the support provided by School of Nursing generous friends and supporters. When students receive scholarships, they are so thankful that they often visit the Office of Admissions and Student Services to share with us their gratitude when they bring a thank you letter for the donor or donors. Our donors are creating future donors. Most of the students who are now receiving scholarship funds tell us that in the future they would like to emulate the generosity of School of Nursing donors. The School of Nursing community and the extended family members sincerely appreciate the financial support of nursing students. The School of Nursing is fortunate to have a rapidly growing number of scholarships for a highly deserving and intellectually talented student body. The compounded effect of gifts for scholarships from generous donors not only benefits students but also creates permanent legacies that serve as beacons to attract potential students considering the UT Health Science Center School of Nursing. Scholarships have grown and will continue to grow because of donor commitment and support of the next generation of nurses who will make lives better! We sincerely appreciate these acts of kindness.
Annual Scholarships are provided to our students through our Annual Fund Campaign, Living Endowment Scholarship Program, and annual events hosted by the School. Other nontraditional mechanisms for giving (i.e. a donation of stocks) are also utilized thorough our annual scholarship program. The entire amount donated annually to the school is distributed to the scholarship recipient (s) according to the donor’s wishes.
Endowed Scholarships are permanent gifts to the university. The endowment corpus holds your entire gift in a perpetual fund which grows forever in its ability to contribute to the university and your area of interest, as specified in the endowment agreement. Endowment gifts allow both the corpus—your original gift—and the income the corpus generates—to grow. Endowments may be cash gifts, pledged gifts, planned gifts or combination “blended” gifts. A minimum gift of $10,000 establishes an Endowed Scholarship at the university and can be paid off over a 5 year time period.
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Development
DONOR HONOR ROLL
Endowment Support Gloria Acosta Gary A. Baldwin Edeward Block Anne F. Briscoe Allen and Barbara Dreeben Mary Ford Patrick and Kelley Frost The Estate of Howard Halff Ronald and Karen Herrmann Carol L. Lynch Gladys I. Lynch Steve and Mary Anne Lynch Becky Garcia Michels William Gray Montgomery Nancy E. Oro Philip & Jean Piccione Jane Cheever Powell Ronald J. Reed Carol Ann Reineck Leonard B. Rodriguez Family and Friends of Jennifer Herin Selvester Robert I. Shelby Barry and Carol Swartz
Capital Support
Donna Block The Economic Development Administration Kinetic Concepts, Inc. (KCI) Methodist Healthcare Ministries University Healthcare System
Program Support
Ronald C. Carroll The Estate of Howard Halff Methodist Healthcare Ministries The Alamo Travel Group, Patricia Pliego Stout Toltec Apartments, LTD.
President’s Council
Abbott Laboratories Employee Giving Campaign The Alamo Travel Group, LP Patricia K. Avant James and Estella Avery Sam and Kay Bashara Michael and Irene Black Donna Block Francisco and Graciela Cigarroa Jo Ann Crow Marcella Doderer John and Cecilia Fuentes Betty Murray Halff Patty L. Hawken Ingenesis, Inc. Brenda G. Jackson Carolyn Seale and Carol Lee Klose Janna W. Lesser Janey B. Marmion Gregg and Sydney Muenster Carol Ann Reineck Maria Cristina Rodriguez Sol and Joanie Schwartz Katherine A. Schwesinger Billie Seale Paul and Marie Smith Neill and Beverley Walsdorf
J. Michael Wilkes Maura Windlinger Wortham Insurance & Risk Management Barbara R. Wulfe Roger L. & Laura D. Zeller Charitable Foundation
Living Endowment Scholarship
Patricia Armstrong Beldon Roofing Jane M. Cardea William and Jean Craig Joseph Johnson and Karen Diaz George W. Brackenridge Foundation John and Darlene Gilcreast Head Family Foundation Janet S. Jeannin Fernando and Martha Lopez George and Becky Major Jim and Julie Meyer Pan American Roundtable San Antonio Federal Credit Union San Antonio Livestock Exposition Sigma Theta Tau Lewis and Nancy Thorne David and Wanda Tillotson Delight Tillotson Wendy Tillotson Mary E. Walker Women’s Overseas Service League Barbara R. Wulfe
Friends of the School of Nursing
Eduardo and Laura Alvarado Betty J. Andrews Lyda Consuelo Arevalo-Flechas Kristine Arlitt Martha Sellars Avant Patricia Kay Avant James and Estella Avery Christopher Bajec Bank of America-San Antonio Sam and Kay Bashara Harold E. Batiste, Jr. Beldon Roofing Company Bernice Bevers Pamela Sue Bilbrey Bill Beatty Insurance Agency, Incorporated Donna Block Evelyn E. Boaz Marian W. Borrell Karen A. Boyle Rosemary S. Breedlove Karen Margaret Brown Kathleen Ann Buckley Carolina L. Canales Austin Capital, Inc. Armando Capote Jane M. Cardea Phyllis Chelette Laura Ehrenberg Chesler Florence Marie Chesnick CHRISTUS HomeCare CHRISTUS Santa Rosa Health Care Corp. Ann C. Coleman
September 2009 – August 2011
Patricia Leanne Cordier Helen Coronado Crossvault Capital Management, LLC Jo Ann Crow Candace Curlee Gayle H. Dasher Karen C. Diaz Robin Ford Dillard Carrol Wayne Doolen Veronica Edwards Earl Fae Cooper Eldridge W. Frank and Rose Ann Elston Gail D. Erlitz Melissa M. Esparza Anne Evans Michael R. Falk Hortensia T. Flores Mary J. Ford Lark Angela Ford Peggy P. Francis Diane Frazor Beverley A. Freeman Frost National Bank John and Cecilia Fuentes Christina Gallas Margit B. Gerardi John and Darlene M. Gilcreast Angela Yvette Glass Antonia Goldsmith Roberto Gonzales Jerry Puente Gonzales Walton B. Gregory Jean M. Guyer Barbara A. Haley Betty Murray Halff Patty L. Hawken Irwin Helford Patricia E. Hernandez The Herrmann Family Charitable Foundation Carol A. Hewson Mary Louise Heye Janis Lee Hofman Joan Maureen Hoyumpa Jennifer Hsu John and Judith Hutcherson Ingenesis, Inc. Brenda G. Jackson Mary F. Jackson Nancy Grace Jackson LuLu Alice Jimerson Lois Bates Jones Christine S. Julian Clare Marie Karabasz Elia C. Keck Gemma Trieste Kennedy Kinetic Concepts, Inc. (KCI) Sandra M. Klein Marilyn Ann Krause Kustoff & Phipps, LLP L.D. Ormsby Charitable Foundation, Inc. Judith R. Lachman Earline Lagueruela Mary K. Lara Barbara F. Law Hector Ledesma, Jr. Pauline Ellen Lee Adrianne D. Linton John H. Littlefield
Patricia Mary Livingston Nancy A. Loeffler Jill C. Lucca Theresa Ann Lymbery Nancy K. Maebius Mary A. Manwell-Jackson Louise A. Maples Janey Briscoe Marmion Christina J. McClean Catherine S. McLeod Karen Elizabeth McMurry Lupita Medina Patricia L. Mego Hilda Mejia Abreu Shirley W. Menard Methodist Healthcare Ministries of South Texas, Inc. Deborah Metting Delia G. Meyer Jacqueline R. Mickley Angela D. Miley Linda Conway Miller Nancy B. Miller Celeste G. Milton Mission Pharmacal Company Donna L. Monk Morningside Ministries Patricia M. Moss Gregg and Sydney Muenster Nix Health Care System Estate of Ruskin C. Norman Lorenzo and Amparo Ortiz Ellen Ott Judy Palans Mickey L. Parsons Marcia R. Patrick Loretta H. Patterson Peterson Regional Medical Center Jean M. Piccione Cols Philip and Jean Piccione Jimmy Earl Pierce Marilyn Ann Ponce Linda Jean Porter-Wenzlaff Jane Cheever Powell William and Lucy Rasco June H. Rekward Margaret M. Reynolds Ann Richardson Gloria P. Rios Marian S. Rodgers Lorena Rodriguez Lisa J. Rodriguez Maria Cristina Rodriguez Raul Rodriguez-Barocio Norma Martinez Rogers Terry Ann Romo Kathleen Rubano Charles R. Ruble Debra E. Rueschenberg San Antonio Federal Credit Union San Antonio Medical Foundation Marcia A. Sawyer Robert N. Schnitzler Joan H. Schwartz The Kyle & Billie Seale Family Foundation Corrine Lois Sherman Phyllis B. Siegel Sigma Theta Tau Paul and Marie Smith
Cecilia A. Sokolowski Southeast Baptist Hospital Arlene Starr Brian E. Steigerwald Elisabeth E. Swann Dana M. Terracina Tesoro Petroleum Corporation Julia A. Thompson Wendy Tillotson Sue E. Turner Julie L. Twist Carol Lee Twombly University Health System Urology San Antonio, P.A. Dolores M.Magaly Varona Susana P. Vela Marilyn Weber Linda L. Weiss Maria Wellisch WellMed Medical Mgmt Inc Wells Fargo Bank Carolyn Leone White Sondra K. White The Whitehurst Foundation Linda K. Winston James Clinton Worth Barbara R. Wulfe Joan Wyatt Suzanne S. Yarbrough Bertina Buran York Roger L. & Laura D. Zeller Charitable Foundation
Friends of the School of Nursing —Deans Discretionary Jo Ann Crow Patty L. Hawken Loretta James
Friends of the School of Nursing —Scholarships Donna K. Bruns Florence Marie Chesnick Jo Ann Crow Lilia DeBenedetto Anita M. Eggert The Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce Sheryl R. Hegedus Natalie Efting Hendrix Walter H. Keim Patricia Mary Livingston Mary A. Manwell-Jackson Hilda Mejia Abreu John J. Melvin Delia G. Meyer Jacqueline R. Mickley Percy L. Richard Alicia Saldivar Rowley Michelle Ann Ryerson Martha Ann Sanders Corrine Lois Sherman Nancy M. Smith Julia A. Thompson Lottie R. Tones
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Faculty PUBLICATIONS
Ongoing and Completed during period January 2010 – May 2011
Kay Avant, PhD, RN, FAAN Walker, LO and Avant KC. Strategies for theory construction in nursing (5th Ed.) Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice-Hall. (2011). Odenbreit M, Staub MM, Herdman H, Brockel J, Keenan G, Avant K. Nursing Classification: Criteria and Evaluation In: H Herdman (Eds). Nursing Diagnosis Definitions and Classification 2011 – 2013. Chicester, West Sussex, United Kingdom: Wiley-Blackwell; 2011.
Diana Beckmann-Mendez, PhD, RN, FNP Klugman CM, Peel JL, Beckmann-Mendez DA. Art Rounds: Teaching Interprofessional Student Visual Thinking Strategies at One School Academic Medicine 2011 Oct;86(10)
Andrea Berndt, PhD Berndt AE. Developing Collaborative Research Agreements Journal of Emergency Nursing 2011 Sep;37(5):497 – 498 Berndt AE. How to Be a Critical Consumer of Research: Two-Step Approach and Five Statistical Concerns J ournal of Emergency Nursing 2009 Nov;35(6):536 – 537. Berndt AE, Parsons ML, Paper B, Browne, JA. Preliminary Evaluation of the Healthy Workplace Index Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Oct;32(4):335 – 344. Owens BL, Jackson M, Berndt AE. Complementary Therapy Used by Hispanic Women During Treatment for Breast Cancer Journal of Holistic Nursing 2009 Sep;27(3):167 – 176. Heye ML, Berndt AE, Lehman CA, Stevens, K. Measuring Evidence-Based Competencies in a Clinical Nurse Specialist Program Clinical Nurse Specialist 2010 Mar;24(2):98
Maria Lapiz-Bluhm, PhD, RN Furr A, Lapiz-Bluhm MD, Morilak DA, Bluhm ML. 5-HT2A receptors in the orbitofrontal cortex facilitate reversal learning and contribute to the beneficial cognitive
effects of chronic citalopram treatment in rats. Int J Neuropsychopharmacol 2011 Oct:1 – 11. Lapiz-Bluhm MDS & Morilak DA. A cognitive deficit induced in rats by chronic intermittent cold stress is reversed by antidepressant treatment International Journal for Neuropsychopharmacology 2010 Feb;13(08):997 – 1009.
Rebecca Bonugli, PhD, MSN, APRN, CNS Bonugli RJ, Brackley MH, Williams GB, Lesser J. Sexual Abuse and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Adult Women with Severe Mental Illness: A Pilot Study Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2010 Jul;31(7):456 – 460. Schillerstrom JE, Salazar R, Regwan H, Bonugli RJ, Royall DR. Executive function in self-neglecting adult protective services referrals compared with elder psychiatric outpatients. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 2009 Oct;17(10):907 – 910.
Margaret Brackley, PhD, FAAN, FAANP Brackley MH, Williams GB, Wei, CC. Substance Abuse Interface with Intimate Partner Violence: What Treatment Programs Need to Know Nursing Clinics of North America 2010 Dec;45(4):581 – 589. Wei,C.C.& Brackley M. Men Who Experienced Violence or Trauma as Children or Adolescents and Who Used Violence in Their Intimate Relationships Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2010 Aug;31(8):498 – 506 Bonugli RJ, Brackley MH, Williams GB, Lesser J. Sexual Abuse and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Adult Women with Severe Mental Illness: A Pilot Study Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2010 Jul;31(7):456 – 460
Carrie Jo Braden, PhD, RN, FAAN Braden, C.J. Guidelines for Achieving Clarity of Concepts Related to Quality of Life In: Quality of Life From Nursing and Patient Perspectives: Theory, Research and Practice. Boston, MA: Jones & Barlett Publishers, 2nd ed.; 2012 Sidani S Braden C. Design, Evaluation, and Translation of Nursing Interventions. Malden, MA. Wiley-Blackwell; 2011.
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Arevalo-Flechas LC, Braden CJ. Caregiving: A hard job done with love The Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging 2009;13(6):S326 – S327.
Eileen T. Breslin, PhD, RN, FAAN Jacelon, C.S., Donoghue, L.C., Breslin, E.T. Scholar in residence: An innovative application of the scholarship of engagement Journal of Professional Nursing 2010 Feb;26(1):61 – 66.
Adelita Cantu, PhD, RN Cantu AG. Exploring Intra-Person Mediators of Older Mexican American Women Who Exercise: A Life History Approach Hispanic HealthCare International 2011;9(2)
Paula C. Clutter, PhD, RN Clutter P, Reed C, Cornett P, & Parsons M. Action Planning Strategies to Achieve Quality Outcomes Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Oct;32(4):272 – 284
Patricia A. Cornett, EdD, RN Cornett P, Parsons ML. Editor Foreword, Journal Issue, Healthy Workplace, Part II Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Oct;32(4):263 – 263. Parsons ML; Cornett P. Sustaining the Pivotal Organizational Outcome: Magnet Recognition Journal of Nursing Management 2011;19(2):277 – 286. Parsons ML; Cornett P. Leading Change for Sustainability Nurse Leader 2011 Aug;9(4):36 – 40. Clutter P, Reed C, Cornett P, & Parsons M. Action Planning Strategies to Achieve Quality Outcomes Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Oct;32(4):272 – 284
Vicky D. Dittmar, MSN, RN, CNE, Dittmar VD. Acute Respiratory Disorders In: Linton, AD (Ed). Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing (5th ed). St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
Dedication Mary Dunn, RN, PhD, PHCNS-BC
Christie L. Harper, MSN, RN, CCNS
McSweeney JC, O’Sullivan P, Cleves MA, Lefler, LL, Cody M, Moser DK Dunn K, Kovacs M, Crane PB, Ramer L, Messmer PR, Garvin BJ, Zhao W. Racial Differences in Women’s Prodromal and Acute Symptoms of Myocardial Infarction American Journal of Critical Care 2010 Jan;19(1):63 – 73
Reed, C, Pao, W, Cocletti, J, Harper CL, Beadle, R. Standardizing Oral Care Practices in an Academic Teaching Center American Journal of Critical Care 2009 Oct;18(3):e14
Socorro Escandon, PhD, RN Escandon, S. Theoretical Versus Grass-Roots Development of a Community Partnership Qualitative Report 2010 Jan;15(1):142 – 155.
Bertha Flores, MSN, RN, WHNP-BC
Brenda G. Jackson, PhD, RN Johnson, M., Phanhtharath, P. & Jackson BG. The bullying aspects of workplace violence in nursing Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Dec;32(4):287 – 295.
Deborah L. Kendall-Gallagher, JD, PhD, RN
Flores BE, Volker, D. Cervical Cancer Screening and Older Mexican American Women: A Case Study Research in Gerontological Nursing 2011 Jan;4(1):3 – 8.
Kendall-Gallagher D, Aiken, LH, Sloane, DM, & Cimiotti, JP. Nurse specialty certification, inpatient mortality, and failure to rescue Journal of Nursing Scholarship 2011 Jun;43(2):188 – 194.
Lark Ford, MSN, RN
Dianne Lavin, PhD, RN
Ford LA. Hypertension In: Linton AD (Ed). Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing (5th ed). St. Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
Lavin D. Smoking In: James, L. & O’Donohue, W (Eds). The Primary Care Toolkit. New York: Springer Science & Business Media LLC; 2009.
Margit Gerardi,
Cheryl A. Lehman, PhD, RN, CRRN,CNS
PhD, MS, MSA, MSN, WHNP Holt K, Gerardi MB. General indicators of IPV in Women‘s Health In: Holt K Gerardi MB. Intimate Partner Violence: Domestic Abuse, Assault, and Spouse-Battering. Saint Louis, Missouri: GW Medical Publishing/ STM Learning; 2012. Gerardi MB. Female reproductive disorders In: Linton AD (ed). Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing, (5th ed). St. Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012 Gerardi, MB, Wright, SE, Nicolas-Wedige, R, Berkowitz, AC, West, AJ, Morel, RJ, Saucedo, DK. Trauma First Aide in primary care: Treating physiological symptoms induced by trauma American Journal for Nurse Practitioners 2010 Sep;14(9/10):44 – 53.
Sara Gill, PhD, RN, IBCLC Walulu RN, Gill SL. Role of Spirituality in HIV-Infected Mothers Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2011 Jul;32:382 – 384. Walulu RN, & Gill SL. Living for My Children Southern Online Journal of Nursing Research 2011 Apr;11(1) DelliFraine J, Langabeer J, Williams JF, Gong AK, Delgado RI, Gill SL. Cost comparison of baby friendly and non-baby friendly hospitals in the United States. Pediatrics 2011 Apr;127(4):989 – 994.
Phyllis A. Gordon, MSN,RN Gordon PA, Christensen CR. Cardiovascular: Peripheral Vascular Disease In: MS Baird & S Bethel (Eds). Manual of Critical Care Nursing (6th ed). St Louis, Mo: Elsevier; 2011.
Lehman CA, Mauk, K. Gerontological Rehabilitation Nursing. In: Mauk, K. (ed.), Rehabilitation Nursing Chicago, IL. Jones and Bartlett; 2011. Heye ML, Berndt AE, Lehman CA, Stevens, K. Measuring Evidence-Based Competencies in a Clinical Nurse Specialist Program Clinical Nurse Specialist 2010 Mar;24(2):98. Lehman CA. APN Knowledge, self-efficacy and practices in providing women’s healthcare services to women with disabilities Rehabilitation Nursing 2009 Sep;34(5):186 – 194. Lehman CA. Nursing Management: Chronic Neurologic Problems In: Lewis, Dirksen, Heitkemper, & Bucher. Medical-Surgical Nursing, Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems, (8th ed). St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2010. Lehman CA. Practical Issues in Conducting Hospitalbased Research Perioperative Nursing Clinics of North America 2009 Sep;4(3):269 – 276.
prevention for young latino parents: randomized clinical trial of efficacy and sustainability Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2011 Apr;165(4):306 – 312. Bonugli RJ, Brackley MH, Williams GB, Lesser J. Sexual Abuse and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Adult Women with Severe Mental Illness: A Pilot Study Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2010 Jul;31(7):456 – 460. Lesser J, Oscos-Sanchez,MA, Davis, C.. Latino Adolescent Mothers and Fathers in South Texas Managing Violence Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2010 Feb;31(2):96 – 102. Kelly, PJ, Lesser J. Mexican-American Neighborhood’s Social Capital and Attitudes about Violence Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2010 Jan;31(1):15 – 20. Kelly P, Lesser J, Chang A, Oscos-Sanchez M, Martinez E, Pineda D, & Mancha J.. A Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial of an Interpersonal Violence Prevention Program with a Mexican-American Community Family and Community Health 2010 Jul/Sep;33(3):207 – 215. Lesser J, Koniak-Griffin, D, Huang, R, Takayangi, S, Cumberland, WG. Parental Protectiveness and Unprotected Sexual Activity Among Latino Adolescent Mothers and Fathers AIDS Education and Prevention 2009 Oct:88 – 102.
Adrianne Linton, PhD, RN, FAAN
Lehman CA, Gutierrez A.. Orthopedic Disorders, Burns, Blasts and PTSD. In: Jacelon C (ed). The Specialty Practice of Rehabilitation Nursing: A Core Curriculum (6th ed). Glenview, IL: ARN; 2011.
Linton, A.D. Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing, (5th ed). Editor of entire book. Author of 34 chapters. St. Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
Janna Lesser, PhD, RN
Judy L. Maltas, MSN, RN, CCRN, CNS-CC
Lauerbach, S.S. & Lesser J. Psychiatric care and mental health in the community. In: K. S. Lundy & S. Janes (Eds.). Community health nursing: Caring for the public’s health. Sudbury, MA: Jones and Bartlett; 2009.
Maltas JL. Cardiac Disorders In: Linton AD (Ed). Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing (5th ed). St. Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
Koniak-Griffin, D. Lesser, J. Takayanagi, S Cumberland, WG. Couple-focused human immunodeficiency virus
Maltas JL. Study Guide Medical-Surgical Nursing Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems St. Louis, MO: Elsevier Mosby; 2011.
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Mickey L. Parsons, PhD, MHA, RN, FAAN
Cynthia V. Purcell, MSN, RN
Ayon A, Parsons ML. Modeling and Role Modeling: Promotion of Self-Care Knowledge in a Regional Health System. International Journal For Human Caring 2010 Sep;14(2):66.
Purcell, C.V. I watched my parents dance today. (Original Poem) The Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing 2010 Feb;14(2).
Parsons ML; Cornett P. Sustaining the Pivotal Organizational Outcome: Magnet Recognition Journal of Nursing Management 2011;19(2):277 – 286. Warner-Robbins C, Parsons ML. Developing peer leaders and reducing recidivism through long-term participation in a faith-based program: The story of Welcome Home Ministries Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly 2010 Jul;28(3):293 – 305. Warner Robbins C, Parsons ML; Co-Issue Editors. Editor Foreword, Journal Issue, Faith-Based Programs Addressing Community Health Issues Family and Community Health; The Journal of Health Promotion and Maintenance 2009 Oct;32(4):292 – 292. Cornett P, Parsons ML. Editor Foreword, Journal Issue, Healthy Workplace, Part II Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Oct;32(4):263 – 263.
Kim McAlister, MSN, RN Grizzle, R.W., Reeves, B., McAlister, K., Zottarelli, L.K. Disaster preparedness program at a senior center: Implications for community partners servicing ethnically diverse older adults. Texas Public Health Association Journal 2010 Jan;62(4):9 – 11.
Nancy McGowan, PhD, RN, CEN
Berndt AE, Parsons ML, Paper B, Browne, JA. Preliminary Evaluation of the Healthy Workplace Index Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Oct;32(4):335 – 344. Parsons ML, Warner-Robbins C. Empowering Formerly Incarcerated Women Through a Caring Ethics Model International Journal for Human Caring 2010 Sep;14(3):74 – 74. Clutter P, Reed C, Cornett P, & Parsons M. Action Planning Strategies to Achieve Quality Outcomes Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Oct;32(4):272 – 284.
Julie Novak, DNSc, RN, MA, CPNP, FAANP
Crist JD, Parsons ML, Warner-Robbins C, Mullins MV, Espinosa YM. Pragmatic Action Research With 2 Vulnerable Populations: Mexican American Elders and Formerly Incarcerated Women Family and Community Health: The Journal of Health Promotion and Maintenance 2009 Oct;32(4):320 – 329.
Novak, J.C. Designing a Nurse-Managed Healthcare Delivery System In: Yuehwern Yih (ed): Handbook of Healthcare Delivery Systems. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, 2011.
Clark P, Parsons ML, Payne L, Garcia S, Reimer A, Golightly-Jenkins C. Impacting Patient Safety Through the Healthy Workplace Journey Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 2009 Oct;32(4):305 – 313.
Novak JC. Interdisciplinary and Interprofessional Collaboration: Essential for the Doctoral Advance Practice Nurse In: Dreher HM & Glasgow ME (eds). Role Development for Doctoral Advanced Nursing Practice. New York, NY. Springer Publishing Company; 2011.
Parsons ML; Cornett P. Leading Change for Sustainability Nurse Leader 2011 Aug;9(4):36 – 40.
McGowan N. Evidence Based Practice: The Debate. Journal of Emergency Nursing 2010 Nov;(47):71 – 72.
Stadtler, A, Novak J. Nursing Organizations, Education, Practice, Research and Policy In: Sparrow, J & Lesser, B, Nurturing Children and Families: Building on the Legacy of T. Berry Brazelton. Malden, MA. Wiley Blackwell; 2010. Erler, C., Novak, J.C. Bisphenol A Exposure: Human Risk and Health Policy Journal of Pediatric Nursing 2010 Oct;25(5):400 – 407. Richards, E, Novak JC. From Biloxi to Cape Town: Curricular Integration of Service Learning Journal of Community Health Nursing 2010 Nov;(27):46 – 50.
Linda Porter-Wenzlaff,
Purcell C.V. Mr, Busby: Or, why I became an oncology nurse Oncology Nurse Advisor 2010 Dec:47.
Kathleen A. Reeves, MSN, RN, CNS, CMSRN Heye ML, Reeves KA. Pain Management In: Linton, AD. Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing (5th ed). St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
Carol A. Reineck, PhD, RN, FAAN Reineck CA, AONE Regulatory Monitoring Committee Members. AONE 2010 Introductory Guide to Health Care Regulation Washington, D.C. and Chicago, IL: American Organization of Nurse Executives; 2009 Dec. 100 p. I served as editor of this work. Regulatory Committee members contributed sections based on their expertise. Now available in members only area of www.aone.org. Reineck CA, Reed C. In pursuit of Quality Outcomes (Chapter 76) In: Nancy Rollins-Gantz, Editor. 101 Global Leadership Lessons for Nurses: Shared Legacies from Leaders and their Mentors,. Indianapolis, IN: Sigma Theta Tau International Nursing Honorary; 2010. p. 401 – 406. Eun Goung A., Choi J. A., Ko U.J., Reineck C. A Study of Republic of Korea Army Nurse Officers’ Perceived Level of Readiness Journal of Military Nursing Research 2009 Sep;27(2):5 – 26. Briley-Hudson V, Jackson-Malik P, Reineck CA, Kittner, A. AONE Delegation Visits India Nurse Leader 2010 Dec;8(6):21 – 25. Reed C, Reineck CA, Fonseca, I. Communicating with intubated patients: A new approach American Nurse Today 2011 Jul;6(7):34 – 34. Reineck CA. Honoring Military Nursing Leadership: Focus on the U.S. Army Nurse Corps AONE Voice of Nursing Leadership 2011 Nov;9(6):12 – 14. Reineck CA. Insurance Coverage & Reimbursement In: Doctor of Nursing Practice Finance and Business Skills. Waxman KT (ed). Danvers, MA: HC Pro; 2012.
PhD, RN, CNE, NEA-BC
Mark Soucy, PhD, PMHCNS-BC, FPMHNP-BC
Porter-Wenzlaff L, Rice J, Sievers L. Dimensional Analysis Improves BSN Students’ Medication Calculation KSA’s http://www.nursinglibrary.org/: Sigme Theta Tau International; 2011 Sep. (Virginia Henderson International Nursing Library, managed by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International).
Soucy MD. Psychological response to illness. In: Linton A (Ed.). Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing, 5th Ed. St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
Porter-Wenzlaff, LJ. The Leadership Roles of the Licensed Vocational Nurse In: Linton AD. Introduction to Medical Surgical Nursing (5th ed). St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
32 TRIBUTE School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Soucy MD. Psychiatric disorders. In: Linton A (Ed.). Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing, 5th Ed. St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012. Soucy MD. Substance related disorders. In: Linton, A. (Ed.). Introduction to Medical-Surgical Nursing, 5th Ed. St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
Dedication CL, Hart RG, Benavente OR. The Levels of Inflammatory Markers in the Treatment of Stroke (LIMITS) Study: Inflammatory Biomarkers as Risk Predictors after Lacunar Stroke International Journal of Stroke 2010 Apr;5(2). White CL, Szychowski JM, Talbert R, Holzemer E, Lau H, McClure LA. Self-Rating of Health and Adherence to Secondary Stroke Prevention Medications in the Secondary Prevention of Small Subcortical Strokes Trial. Stroke 2010 Feb (41): e290. Rochette A, Korner-Bitensky N, Bishop D, Teasell R, White CL, Bravo G, Côté R, Lachaine J, Green T, Lebrun L-H, Lanthier S, Kapral M, Wood-Dauphinee S. Study protocol of The YOU CALL—WE CALL TRIAL: Impact of a multimodal support intervention after a “mild” stroke BMC Neurology 2010 Jan;10(3).
Gail Williams, PhD, PMHCNS-BC Bonugli RJ, Brackley MH, Williams GB, Lesser J. Sexual Abuse and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Adult Women with Severe Mental Illness: A Pilot Study Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2010 Jul;31(7):456 – 460.
Williams GB, Gerardi MB, Gill SL, Soucy MD, Taliaferro, DH. Reflective journaling: Innovative strategy for selfawareness for graduate nursing students International Journal for Human Caring 2009;13(3):36 – 43.
Kathleen Stevens, EdD, RN, ANEF, FAAN Stevens KR. Evidence-based practice in nursing and healthcare. A guide to best practice. In: Critical appraisal of literature. In Melnyk & Fineout-Overhold (Eds).. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.; 2010. Stevens KR. Evidence-Based Practice: Destination or Journey? Nursing Outlook 2010 Jan;58(6):273 – 275. Stevens KR. Guest editor for special issue on evidencebased practice Nursing Outlook 2010 Nov. Stevens KR. Guest Editorial: Evidence-based practice:Destination or journey? Nursing Outlook 2010 Dec:273 – 275. Heye ML, Berndt AE, Lehman CA, Stevens, KR. Measuring Evidence-Based Competencies in a Clinical Nurse Specialist Program Clinical Nurse Specialist 2010 Mar;24(2):98.
Candace Tull, MSN, RN, WHNP-BC Tull CM, Lovato, Stella, Woodson-Day, Beverly, RossGordon, Jovita. Faculty Perspectives of Adult Learners in a College Environment The Journal of Continuing Higher Education 2011 May;59(2):77 – 84.
Mary E. Walker, MSN, RN, CCNS, CMSRN Walker ME. Skin Disorders In: Linton AD (Ed). Introduction to Medical Surgical Nursing (5th ed). St Louis, MO: Elsevier; 2012.
Rosemary Walulu, PhD, RN Walulu RN, Gill SL. Role of Spirituality in HIV-Infected Mothers Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2011 Jul;32:382 – 384. Walulu RN, & Gill SL. Living for My Children Southern Online Journal of Nursing Research 2011 Apr;11(1).
Carole White, PhD, RN White CL. Nurse Champions: A Key Role In Bridging the Gap between Reseach and Practice Journal of Emergency Nursing 2011 Jul;37(4):386 – 387. White CL, McClure LA, Wallace P, Bramiah J, Liskay A, Roldan A, Benavente OR. The correlates and course of depression in those with lacunar stroke: results from the Secondary Prevention of Small Subcortical Strokes (SPS3) Trial Cerebrovascular Diseases 2011 Sep;32:354 – 360.
Brackley MH, Williams GB, Wei, CC. Substance Abuse Interface with Intimate Partner Violence: What Treatment Programs Need to Know Nursing Clinics of North America 2010 Dec;45(4):581 – 589.
Suzanne Yarbrough, PhD, RN Saewert, K.J., Yarbrough, S.S. Evaluation of clinical performance. N. Ard, & Valiga, T. M. (Ed) In: Clinical Nursing Education: Current Reflections. New York,NY: National League for Nursing: 2009.
Herlinda Zamora, MSN, RN Zamora H., Clingerman E.. Health Literacy Among Older Adults: A Systematic Literature Review Journal of Gerontological Nursing 2011 Oct;37(10):41 – 51.
Benavente OR, White CL, Pearce L, Pergola PE, Roldan AM, Benavente M.F., Coffey C, McClure L.A., Szychowski J.M., Conwit R., Heberling P.A., Howard G., Bazan C, Vidal-Pergola G., Talbert RL, Hart RG. The Secondary Prevention of Small Subcortical Strokes (SPS3) Study International Journal of Stroke 2011 Apr;6(2):164 – 175. Benavente O, Kase C, Arboix A, Roquer J, Castellanos M, Trueta J, McClure L, Lau H, Roldan A, Hart RG, White CL. The short-term functional outcome in patients with lacunar stroke. Observations from the SPS3 Study Stroke 2011 Feb (41): e243. White CL, McClure LA, Szychowski M, Benavente OR, on behalf of the SPS3 Investigators. Intensive Risk Factor Management in the Elderly with Small Vessel Disease: The SPS3 Experience. Cerebrovasc Disease 2010 May;29(suppl 2):34. Elkind M. S. V., Luna J. M., Coffey C. S., McClure L. A., Liu K. M., Spitalnik S., Paik M. C., Roldan AM, White School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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Family & Community Health Systems Faculty Margaret Humm Nancy Kellogg Gemma Kennedy Dianne Lavin Janna Lesser Mary Maffei Margaret Marshall Jennifer Martinez Cervando Martinez Lisa Matasovsky Mary Ann Matteson Kim McAlister Carolyn McLerran Anthia Murray Julie Novak Maria Ostrander Deborah Pallister Zandra Perez Suellen Reed Susan Reiff Frannie Rettig Jacqueline Riley-Baker
Dr. Adrianne Linton, Chair Family & Community Health Systems
Beverly Robinson Norma Martinez Rogers Lisa Sievers
KoKo Aung
Patti Davidson
Laura Sisk
Kay Avant
Holly DiLeo
Bridget Slattery
Carol Barrera
Mary “Kelly� Dunn
Carmillia Jean Smith
Kathryn Bauer
Socorro Escandon
Mark Soucy
Diana Beckmann-Mendez
Rebecca Fenton
Ada Tapper
Andrea Berndt
Bertha Flores
Rosalie Tierney-Gumaer
Maria Danet Bluhm-Lapiz
Julie Garcia
Candace Tull
Rebecca Bonugli
Erica Garcia-Frausto
Roseann Vivanco
Jannette Boodon-Elliott
Rebecca Garcia-Michels
Della Wagner
Terri Boyce
Margit Gerardi
Cynthia Wall
Margaret Brackley
Sara Gill
Rosemary Walulu
Carrie Jo Braden
Diane Goddard
Cynthia Weston
Eileen Breslin
Kara Goodspeed
Dorothy Williams
Kathleen Buckley
Ruth Grubesic
Gail Williams
Adelita Cantu
Peter Guarnero
Martha Williams
Jane Cardea
Rita Hannah
Margaret Woodtli
Sharon Chatham
Patty Hawken
Cathy Woodward
Patricia Clarke
Cheri Hicks
Suzanne Yarbrough
Lisa Cleveland
Melanie Hobson
Stacey Young-McCaughan
Olga Davidson
Barbara Holtzclaw
Lisa Zerda
34 TRIBUTE School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Dedication Health Restoration & Care Systems Management Theresa Villarreal Mary Walker Patricia Wathen Sherry Weaver Beverly Wheeler Catherine White Carole White Kristina Wise
photo of Dr. Carol Reineck
Herlinda Zamora
Pauline Swiger (left) reviews her course work with Carol Reineck, PhD Swiger is a major in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps and a full-time student in the first cohort of the Clinical Nurse Leader (CNL) Master’s Program.
Dr. Carol Reineck, Chair Health Restoration & Care Systems Management Faculty Elizabeth Anderson
Cathy Miller
Natalie Baker
Denise Miner-Williams
James Bland
Marissa Molina
Joyce Borgfeld
Kristen Overbaugh
James Cleveland
Mickey Parsons
Paula Clutter
Linda Porter-Wenzlaff
Patricia Cornett
Cynthia Purcell
Vicky Dittmar
Diane Rankin
Amanda Flagg
Kathleen Reeves
Lark Ford
Janis Rice
Deborah Forman-Lindsay
Wesley Richardson
Phyllis Gordon
Angela Ross
Christie Harper
Joseph Schmelz
Brenda Jackson
Jennie Shaw
Linda Juenke
Pamela Smith
Deborah Kendall-Gallagher
Mary Stephens
Cheryl Lehman
Kathleen Stevens
Sharon Lewis
Isabell Stoltz
Judy Maltas
Jacquelyn Stovall
Nancy McGowan
Martha Tuller School of Nursing | The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio TRIBUTE
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7703 Floyd Curl Drive • San Antonio, TX 78229-3900
upcoming events Ribbon Cutting for the School of Nursing Simulation Center, June 13th 4:30 p.m.
School of Nursing’s Annual Luncheon Date TBA
For more information on these events contact Ashley Lowe at 210-567-5313 or via email at lowea@uthscsa.edu