Nurses 1994

Nurses 1994




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Nurses 1994


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classnotes

Class of 1994



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SITE DEVELOPMENT: VUSN Informatics and University Web Communications

Every VUSN graduate has exciting things happening in her or his life, both professionally and personally. Class Notes – printed twice a year in the Vanderbilt Nurse Magazine and available online on this page – is an opportunity for you to not only learn what other alumni are doing but also share news about your life. We would love to hear what you've been up to! Please contact us with any updates, or call 615-322-4836. 
The most recent listings appear first. More info may be available at www.vuconnect.com and in the Class Notes sections of Vanderbilt Nurse Magazine at https://www.vanderbilt.edu/vanderbiltnurse


Margaret Anderson
, MSN’94 , co-authored "Child Abuse Response Simulation for Advanced Practice Nursing Students," published in the July/August 2020 issue of
Clinical Nurse Specialist
. She successfully defended her doctor of nursing practice project at the University of Alabama at Huntsville College of Nursing in March 2017.

Sonya Barbour, MSN’94 , is a family nurse practitioner at Grace Pediatrics in Smyrna, Tennessee (2020).

Mike Briley, MSN’94 , received the Best of Jackson Award–Primary Healthcare Clinic in 2020 and 2021 for his practice, Primary Care–Bemis, in Tennessee. The award is presented by Jackson Entrepreneurs.

Amy Lee Bull, MSN’94 , is a family nurse practitioner at Covenant Medical in Fairview, Tennessee, and on faculty at Georgetown University School of Nursing and Health Studies in Washington, D.C. (2017).

Misty Sperry Chambers, MSN’94 , presented, “Ensuring Safe Spaces,” for the American Nurses Association’s
COVID-19 Nurse Innovation Stories
blog, posted in 2021.

Shannon Cole, MSN’94 , co-authored “The Vanderbilt Program in Interprofessional Learning: Sustaining a Longitudinal, Clinical Experience that Aligns Practice with Education,” published in
Academic Medicine
in April 2020. She was promoted to assistant professor at VUSN in 2019 and presented “The Patient Voice: Interprofessional Educational Activities that Promote Patient Involvement,” and “Evaluation of the Impact of a Longitudinal 2-year Interprofessional Program on Students’ Perceptions of Health Professions Other Than Their Own,” at the Collaborating Across Borders conference. That year, she co-authored “Consequences of Dietary Sugar Consumption: A Historical Perspective,” published in
The Nurse Practitioner
, and was acknowledged in a
Kentucky New Era
story for her care of a breast cancer patient. Shannon was named co-director of the Vanderbilt Program in Interprofessional Learning in June 2018. 


Cheryl Bridges Cooper, MSN’94
, of New Concord, Kentucky, passed away February 3, 2021.

Susan Roberts Cooper, BSN’79, MSN’94 , was featured in the June 2016 issue of
Memphis Medical News
. She is senior vice president and chief integration officer at Regional One Health in Memphis, Tennessee.

Amy Wimmer Cox, MSN’94 , is a nurse practitioner with Tennessee Oncology in Gallatin, where she specializes in medical oncology and hematology (2020).

Terri Crutcher, MSN’94 , co-authored “Improving Efficiency within a Trauma Nurse Practitioner Team,” published in the
Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners
in May 2020. She was published in the March 2019 issue of
Nursing Clinics
and retired as assistant professor from VUSN later that year. She received the VUSN Dean’s Award for Faculty Achievement in Clinical Practice in May 2018.


Sarah Fogel, MSN’94, PhD’01 , retired in June 2021 from her role as professor and director of the Associate of Science in Nursing-Masters of Science in Nursing PreSpecialty program at VUSN. She received the Spotlight Award from the Vanderbilt University Office of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex Life in May 2020 for her advocacy of LGBTQI health, and co-authored “Perceptions of Sexual and Gender Minority Content in Graduate Nursing Curricula,” published that month in
Nursing Education Perspectives
. Under Sarah’s leadership, the ASN to MSN program was ranked by RN to MSN as the top registered nurse to MSN program in the United States in 2019.

Greta Fowinkle, MSN’94, DNP’11 , is co-leading a population health course for bachelors-level registered nurses at the Medical University of South Carolina College of Nursing in Charleston, where she is director of case management/care transitions (2016).

Jack Garrett, MSN’94 , is a nurse practitioner with Maury Regional Medical Group Pain Management in Columbia, Tennessee (2021).

Tricia Ten Haaf, MSN’94 , became director of the John J. Pershing Veterans Administration Medical Center in Poplar Bluff, Missouri, starting in January 2016. 

Missy Smith Hayes, MSN’94 , co-authored “Evaluation of Two Academic Practice Partnerships for Chronic Disease Management in Nursing Education,” published in November 2020 in
Public Health Nursing
.

Mayme Hickman, MSN’94 , was mentioned by Columbia, Tennessee’s
The Daily Herald
in October 2019 for a piece about her husband’s retirement with honors from the U.S. Army.

Amy Hall Hull, MSN’94 , received an Excellence in Patient Experience Award from Vanderbilt University Medical Center in October 2021, and the Alumni Award for Clinical Achievement in Nursing presented by the VUSN Alumni Association during the school’s annual awards ceremony in October 2017. That year, Amy co-authored “The Impact of Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause on Quality of Life,” in the November/December issue of
Urologic Nursing
. She is an assistant professor of clinical obstetrics and gynecology at VUMC.

Francie Likis, BS’93, MSN’94 , co-authored “Nurse Editors' Roles and Practices,” published in the
Journal of Nursing Scholarship
in November 2021, and “Addressing Racism in Editorial Practices,” published in
Nurse Author & Editor
in December 2020. She received the Frontier Nursing University Nurse-Midwife Award for Distinguished Service to Society in October 2018, and published the 3 rd edition of her textbook,
Women's Gynecologic Health , in summer 2016. Francie is editor-in-chief of the Journal of Midwifery and Women's Health.


Hollie Potts, MSN’94 , is on the core faculty at the Cumberland Institute of Holistic Therapies in Brentwood, Tennessee (2020).

Greg Ross III, MSN’94 , joined Merit Health Medical Group in Brandon, Mississippi, in November 2015 as a family nurse practitioner . 

Bridget Wilson, MSN’94 , was elected in March 2016 to the Accreditation Board of Specialty Nursing Certification . She is a nurse practitioner in the department of neurological surgery at the University of California Davis Health System and serves on the American Board of Neuroscience Nursing as secretary/treasurer. 



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The 1990 Commission on the National Nursing Shortage, designed to implement projects recommended by the 1988 Commission on Nursing, focused on a number of areas: student recruitment and educational pathways, career development and retention of nursing personnel, the restructuring of nursing services, effective utilization of nursing personnel, data collection and analysis requirements, use of information systems and related technology in nursing. The study resulted in a number of recommendations. The easing of the contemporary nursing shortage in the early 1990s diminished the urgency felt by those in the hospital and health care field in addressing the problem and reduced the commission’s effectiveness.
Nursing’s Agenda for Healthcare Reform , a joint statement in which over sixty nursing and other health professional organizations participated, articulated the profession’s blueprint for health care reform. The Agenda , promoted by the authors as fiscally responsible, called for expanded patient access to primary health services, a movement from a health system based on illness care to one which focused on wellness, and utilization of the most cost effective health care providers. The Agenda supported the establishment of a federally defined standard package of essential health care services for all Americans provided by and financed through a combination of public and private plans and sources.
The promotion of the National Center for Nursing Research to the status of a full-fledged institute within the National Institutes of Health climaxed a long battle fought by nursing groups over many years. The change in status recognized the critical contributions to the nation’s health made by nursing research and provided a strong base for the funding of research projects
Dedicated on November 11, 1993, the Vietnam Women’s Memorial honors the 265,000 women who served in the military during the Vietnam era. Although the exact number of women who served in Vietnam is unknown, 90 percent were estimated to be nurses. The campaign to erect a memorial to the women was spearheaded by Diane Carlson Evans, an Army nurse who served in Vietnam from 1968 to 1969. Eight women, all nurses, died in the conflict.
The Health Security Act, proposed in 1993, was viewed by supporters as the best effort in over forty years to increase access to health care for all Americans. Professional nursing groups took an active role in formulating and supporting the act continuing a tradition among nursing groups dating back to passage of the Medicare and Medicaid legislation in 1965 of advocating for better health care for all.
Congress directed the Institute of Medicine to carry out this study on the effects of the drive for cost effectiveness, cost containment, and competition on nursing staff and the quality of patient care in hospitals and nursing homes. The study concluded that the number of professional nurses was adequate for the immediate future but noted the educational mix of registered nurses, i.e., the mix of nurses with associate and baccalaureate degrees, might be insufficient to meet current and future demands of the health care system. The panel carrying out the study expressed concern that the health care system was undergoing major changes without adequate monitoring or evaluation of the impact of these changes on patients. The study recommended greater involvement of nurses in restructuring initiatives and more research into their effects on patient outcomes. An extensive list of recommendations accompanied the report.
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act protected health insurance coverage for employees either changing or losing their jobs. The act also included significant provisions regarding maintaining the privacy and security of health data.
The 1997 Balanced Budget Act, a bipartisan effort to balance the federal budget by the year 2002, significantly altered the Medicare and Medicaid programs and the access of vulnerable populations to health care. It provided for increased Medicare privatization options, allowed states greater flexibility in administering their Medicaid programs, and implemented a Prospective Payment System for Medicare-funded home nursing care. The measure also enacted the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCIP), funding health insurance coverage for children of low income families. The act’s provisions also directed Medicare reimbursement to all nurse practitioners and clinical nurse specialists in all geographic areas and clinical settings, opening up advanced nurse practitioner services to a larger population base.
The U. S. Public Health Service Study at Tuskegee, the infamous study of untreated syphilis in African American men was conducted over a forty-year period by the United States Public Health Service. Over the course of the study, the Public Health Service failed to inform the men included in the study that they were study subjects and lied to them about the nature of the “treatments” they received. They also failed to provide them with information about treatment options available for syphilis and discouraged other health professionals from treating them. The study is widely viewed as one of the worst examples of racial injustice inflicted on the African American community by the medical research establishment. The role of public health nurse Eunice Rivers in the study and her involvement in carrying out deceptive practices during the conduct of the Study is the subject of much debate, discussion and controversy.
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