SON Faculty Member Tom Bush Receives Award from Family Medicine Residents

School of Nursing faculty member Tom Bush was unanimously selected by the senior residents in the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Medicine to receive the Carolina Cup for Outstanding Resident Teaching. Each year, the family medicine residents vote for the faculty members who have most influenced their education throughout their training. One award is given to a faculty member within their department, and one is awarded to a faculty member outside the department. Bush received the award for faculty outside the department. It is the second time he has received this recognition.


Tom Bush received the Carolina Cup for Outstanding Resident Teaching for the second time this year.

Tom Bush received the Carolina Cup for Outstanding Resident Teaching for the second time this year.

Faculty member Carol Durham to be inducted into NLN Academy

Carol Durham will be inducted into the National League of Nursing Academy of Nursing Education in September 2009. Durham was recognized for her significant contributions to nursing education in the area of simulation. She has developed simulation experiences for a variety of learners, including undergraduate and nurse practitioner students, registered nurses and nursing assistants, as well as inter-professionals in medicine and pharmacy.

Recognizing the need to prepare other educators in simulation, Durham has taken the patient simulator out to AHEC nurses, training them in the use of simulation. She has also assisted faculty at various nursing schools nationwide in faculty development around simulation, teamwork and quality and safety.

In a current project, Durham is using simulation to educate nurses in long-term care settings in North Carolina. For the past two years, she was on a team of nine simulation experts from across the United States along with eight international simulation faculty who developed courses for the Simulation Innovation Resource Center (SIRC) sponsored by the National League of Nursing and Laerdal Medical. The SIRC is now widely used for faculty development in simulation.

Carol Durham, director of the Clinical Education & Resource Center, will be inducted in the National League of Nursing Academy of Nursing Education in September 2009

Carol Durham, director of the Clinical Education & Resource Center, will be inducted in the National League of Nursing Academy of Nursing Education in September 2009

N.C. Dept. of Health & Human Services Promotes SON Psych-Mental Health Program

The N.C. Department of Health & Human Services, Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Substance Abuse Services sent out a memo yesterday, June 17, to all local medical entities and directors, promoting  the SON’s master’s and post-master’s degree psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner program.

The letter highlights this program and its graduates as valuable contributors to the healthcare workforce who can accentuate and broaden the mental health services currently available to patients in the state.

According to SON faculty member Victoria Soltis-Jarrett, who coordinates the psych-mental health nurse practitioner program, the School will graduate 20 nurses with this degree this year. Over the next four years, she said she anticipates the program will produce a total of 100 graduates, all of whom are committed to meeting the mental health needs of North Carolina.

Local medical organizations or individuals interested in learning more about the program or its graduates should contact Soltis-Jarrett: (919) 843-8587 or vsoltis@email.unc.edu.

SON Alum Becomes Impromtu Rap Star — Beats Out Lyrics about Carolina Nursing

Jon Seskevich, BSN ’87, has been working for more than two decades to help families with stress and pain management. He has also produced two spoken-word CDs, but few people are aware of his lyrical talents. While a student at the SON, Seskevich put his creative juices to work, wrote a rap about the School and performed it on campus. We’re lucky that someone caught it on video. It’s priceless, and it captures the spirit of being a Carolina Nurse!

Check it out: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pUhD55eoa5M

Showtime Launches Nurse Jackie — what do you think?

Ask any nurse about how nurses are portrayed on TV and in movies, and they will likely outline several reasons why these depictions are inaccurate and negatively impact how the public perceives the profession.  But, now, the cable channel Showtime is launching a new series, Nurse Jackie, where the main character (played by Edie Falco of Sopranos fame) is a strong, take-charge ED nurse who readily speaks her mind. She has her flaws — addiction to pain medication to relieve her bad back and bending some rules to help patients and their families — but she demonstrates a high level of skill and knowledge.

Is she the depiction of nursing that you have been waiting to see on TV? Watch the first episode here:

http://www.truthaboutnursing.org/news/2009/jun/08_jackie.html

Send us your comments — is Nurse Jackie a positive or negative addition to nursing?

Give Us Your Thoughts!

We need your help! The School of Nursing Office of Advancement is looking for the best way to describe the School and what it provides for its students and healthcare, and we want to know what you think. Please take a few minutes to answer the questions below. Your answers don’t need to be lengthy. You can leave your comments here or e-mail them to whitney_howell@unc.edu.

We thank you in advance for your assistance!

  1. What does Carolina Nursing mean to you?
  2. When you think of the School and your education here, what one word pops to mind?
  3. What is the most important thing you learned here?
  4. What difference has the School made in your life?
  5. What is the one thing you always wanted people to know about the School?
  6. If you had to describe nursing in one phrase, what would it be?

SON Researcher Partners with Local Latino Center to Help Women and Children Lose Weight

From the University Gazette:

Everyone knows what happens when you toss a pebble into a pond: The ripples start out small and grow larger, reaching farther. That’s how

Latino moms and children are participating in Diane Berry's weight-management study to help parents and children learn to control their weight and make good exercise and food intake choices.

Latino moms and children are participating in Diane Berry's weight-management study to help parents and children learn to control their weight and make good exercise and food intake choices.

Diane Berry, assistant professor in the School of Nursing, describes her work with Carrboro’s El Centro Latino – a nonprofit organization that provides educational and social services and cultural activities to help improve the quality of life for Latinos living in and around Orange County.

Hispanics or Latinos now represent 12 percent of the population of Carborro and almost 6 percent of Orange County.

“Chapel Hill/Carrboro as well as areas in and around Orange County have seen significant growth in their Hispanic populations, particularly among migrant workers and other laborers and their families, who tend to be vulnerable to isolating factors,” Berry said. “The transitory lifestyle, limited education, language barriers and challenges to accessing services create a sort of ‘silence’ among these  populations. My goal is to help give them a voice and access to support both from the community and Carolina.”

Berry has worked with El Centro Latino directors, community health educators and a core group of Spanish-speaking women in the area from Mexico to implement health education classes focused on topics they select. Berry and her team have examined the women’s concerns regarding immigration, weight gain, nutrition and decreased physical activity in themselves and their children. Using Community-Based Participatory Research and working with this core group of women during a three-year period, they refined, adapted, translated and tested a weight management intervention designed for Spanish-speaking women and their young children.

They delivered a feasibility study in the community and included 12 weekly two-hour classes followed by three monthly two-hour classes, after which the women and children had three months on their own to see how they did. Overall, results were positive. These women lost weight and decreased their body fat percentage, improved nutrition and physical activity knowledge, and developed eating and exercise self-efficacy. The children stabilized their weight gain.

Berry’s efforts contributed significantly to her selection by the University as one of eight 2009–10 Faculty Engaged Scholars (FESP), an initiative launched in October 2007 by the Carolina Center for Public Service and the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Public Service and Engagement.

The two-year program enables scholars to connect their faculty work with the needs of a community and apply their skills to make a difference. Scholars receive an annual stipend of $7,500, have opportunities to interact with like-minded faculty from a variety of disciplines to address relevant issues through service and engaged scholarship, and participate in workshops, panels and case studies by experts to help scholars get the most from their experiences.

A grant from Strowd Roses Inc. of Chapel Hill to the Center for Public Service is helping fund Berry’s stipend, which she is using to further the partnership she has developed with El Centro Latino and community health educators and expand it to other communities with large Spanish-speaking populations.

In only its second year, the FESP is gaining local and national recognition as an innovative, effective program to further faculty involvement in the scholarship of engagement. Lynn Blanchard, the center’s director, has presented FESP to more than 20 universities through the national project Faculty for Engaged Campus supported by Community-Campus Partnerships for Health, with a grant from the Fund for Post-Secondary Education of the U.S. Department of Education. There has also been Canadian interest in learning how this program fosters faculty and community partnerships to create positive change.

Berry has partnered with El Centro Latino for several years to help bring the University’s knowledge and resources to bear on critical issues in the community. Berry’s weight-management intervention is helping community health educators and Latina participants improve nutrition and physical activity within their families. The goal is to reduce the incidence of overweight and obesity, and slow the development of type 2 (non-insulin dependent) diabetes.

“Many of the women and children we work with are uninsured and have limited access to health-promotion programs,” Berry said. “Preventing type 2 diabetes will ultimately decrease healthcare costs in the long-term, but more  importantly will empower families to take charge of their health.”

Berry said her involvement with El Centro Latino has added dimension to her work, inspired her teaching and enriched her perspective.

“I have always had a passion for public service, and to be able to directly apply my scholarly work in the field is tremendously rewarding to me, my team, and beneficial to my students,” she said. “It is extremely exciting when you start with a clinical problem, like type 2 diabetes, and begin to address it at the core, and maybe even prevent it, long before we have to intervene clinically.”

As a Faculty Engaged Scholar, Berry said she has learned as much or more from her experience as those she is working to serve.

“I have gained so much more than just advancing my research or collaborating with scholars outside the confines of our campus,” she said. “I have seen firsthand that Carolina, or any institution, can and should partner equally with its surrounding community to bring contributions to the table that will ultimately affect positive change.”

Through the FESP, Berry and Carolina have set the ripples in motion. Their partnership with El Centro Latino is broadening horizons and creating solutions.

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