Beth Black Receives NIH Funding to Study End of Life Care

Beth Black, PhD, RN

Assistant Professor Dr. Beth Black has received funding from the National Institute of Nursing Research at NIH for her grant entitled “End-of-Life Care After Severe Fetal Diagnosis.” The grant is for $407,000 over 2 years to study the implementation of a perinatal palliative care program at the UNC Center for Maternal and Infant Health, and responses to a life-threatening fetal diagnosis by women, their partners and health care providers. Dr. Margarete Sandelowski, Cary C. Boshamer Professor, is a co-investigator and Dean Kristen M. Swanson is a research adviser to the study.  

 
“We need to learn how to support these families in the best way possible. The way to learn is to talk to them, to find out what they need, identify their grief trajectory, and find out how they do after the loss,” Dr. Black says. In the long term, Dr. Black wants her work to provide a good theoretical foundation for the development of interventions for these families. She also wants to align perinatal issues with the end of life care issues conceptually. “I’m really committed to the care of these families. I want to find out from them and from their providers how we can best care for them in this heartbreaking situation.”
 
Look for more on Dr. Black’s work in the next issue of Carolina Nursing magazine.

School of Nursing Ranking Climbs to #4 Among Graduate Schools

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Nursing tied for fourth in the 2011 U.S. News and World Report Best Graduate School rankings. This is a move up from its tie for fifth place in 2007, the last time the publication ranked graduate-level nursing programs.

The School’s average assessment score of 4.5 matched that of the University of California-San Francisco and placed it just under Johns Hopkins University, University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Washington, which all tied for first with a score of 4.6. The U.S. News and World Report rankings are based on the ratings of peer academic experts and will appear in the 2012 edition of “Best Graduate Schools.”

SON  also ranked in the top ten for several nursing specialties. It tied for fourth in the psychiatric/mental health clinical nurse specialist category, placed tenth for pediatric nurse practitioner, and was sixth for nursing service administration. See all the nursing rankings here.

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Watch the “I am a Carolina Nurse” Video

Share the link to the video with your friends: http://wp.me/pb6Ou-oS.

Being a “Carolina Nurse” has many dimensions.  This 7-minute video tells the story from the perspective of students, alumni, faculty, SON and hospital leaders who all experience the quality, energy and emotion of being connected to one of the leading Schools of Nursing in the United States.  Unrestricted private gifts made this video possible and we are grateful to our alumni and friends who provide on-going support to the School.  For giving opportunities, please contact Director of Advancement Norma_Hawthorne@unc.edu

Dean Swanson Talks about Healing After Miscarriage

In a Q&A on the yahoo.com site “Shine,” Dr. Kristen Swanson, Dean of the Chapel Hill School of Nursing discusses the process of healing after a miscarriage.

In the article, Dean Swanson says, “One of the first things I say to couples who come to see me is that when you lose something, you have to name it for yourself to know what it is. You also have to allow your partner to name for his or herself. Usually, for the mother—it’s the loss of a child that is the hardest. Interestingly, for a lot of partners, their biggest loss is their access to their partner, this feeling of “I wish I could do something to lift her out of this but I don’t know what to do.”

Read the complete article: On Lisa Ling’s new website, women find ways to cope with tragedy

Dean Swanson: linking teacher’s miscarriage to fight and fall may be premature

Kristen M. Swanson, PhD, RN, FAAN

A high school Spanish teacher in New York City miscarried last week after she fell to the ground while breaking up a fight between two students. ABC.com interviewed the Dean of the UNC Chapel Hill School of Nursing, Kristen Swanson about the incident in the story Teacher Breaks Up Fight, and Miscarries (Swanson is in the text story, not the video).

In the story, Dean Swanson, who is an expert in miscarriage, comments:

 Batista faces a “constant coming to terms with loss. It’s a death of a life that was short. It’s a death that’s a bit confusing, because you never got to meet the person you’re grieving. But you’re also grieving the loss of yourself as a mother or dad and the scenario around it that never gets to be,” she said.

“We don’t know what ultimately could have caused it,” she said. “It could very easily have been that there was a silent miscarriage happening all along and it just began to complete itself at that time — coincidental to it, not caused by it.”

Dean Swanson comments on Bush’s miscarriage on Time.com

Dean Kristen Swanson

In a story on Time.com, UNC Chapel Hill School of Nursing Dean Kristen Swanson comments on George W. Bush talking about the miscarriage his mother had when he was a teenager:

“Let’s put ourselves in Barbara Bush’s position,” says Kristen Swanson, the study’s lead investigator and a nurse who is also dean of the nursing school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC). “She’s home, bleeding, cramping and passes the fetus. She scoops it up, puts it in a jar and says, Drive me to the hospital. She says to her son, I’m in the middle of a miscarriage, and this is the fetus that I just passed. There is nothing sinister in this.”

Read the complete article: George W. Bush, His Mom and Her Fetus: Not So Weird After All. Swanson is an expert on miscarriage and how couples respond emotionally to it. She began her work on miscarriage 25 years ago with her dissertation, “The Unborn One: A Profile of The Human Experience of Miscarriage,” and has continued studying this area both as an investigator and as a consultant to other researchers’ works. 
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Dean Kristen Swanson Featured on Radio Show

Dean Kristen Swanson

Dean and Alumni Distinguished Professor Kristen M. Swanson was the featured guest on the Sept. 11 YOUR HEALTH radio talk show. She talked about the Swanson Theory of Caring, updated listeners on the nursing shortage, and discussed issues facing nurses and nursing education today.

YOUR HEALTH is a weekly one hour radio talk show on patient health produced by the University of North Carolina Department of Family Medicine. The show is co-hosted by Dr. Adam Goldstein and Dr. Cristy Page.

Listen to the radio show here: http://yourhealthradio.org/listen-to-the-show/.

ABC News Features Dean Swanson’s Research on Miscarriage

ABC News posted an article Dec. 10, 2009, about the emotions that surround miscarriage and early pregnancy loss. The story explores the reactions and feelings experienced by several couples and includes analysis and data from  experts, including School of Nursing Dean Kristen M. Swanson.

In the article, Swanson discusses the intensity of emotions associated with a pregnancy loss and how male and female partners experience the loss in different ways. Through her research, she said, she has found that women experience a pregnancy loss in very vivid terms, and their partners feel the loss more vaguely.

Swanson recently published a study about the benefits of nurse-led counseling for couples experiencing miscarriage and early pregnancy loss in the August issue of the Journal of Women’s Health and Gender-Based Medicine.

Dean Kristen M. Swanson’s Latest Study Featured on Conceive Magazine Web site

Dean Kristen M. Swanson recently published a study in the Journal of Women’s Health and Gender-Based Medicine about the best counseling methods to help couples who have recently

Conceive Magazine Web site today published an article about Dean Kristen M. Swanson's latest study about the benefits of nurse-led counseling sessions for couple recently suffering a miscarriage or pregnancy loss.

Conceive Magazine Web site today published an article about Dean Kristen M. Swanson's latest study on the benefits of nurse-led counseling sessions for couple recently suffering a miscarriage or pregnancy loss.

suffered a miscarriage or early pregnancy loss to process their emotions and grief. Her research determined that couples are best helped by participating in nurse-led counseling sessions.

A stand-alone article about her research was published on the Conceive Magazine Web site today, Sept. 23, 2009. The magazine has a circulation of nearly 200,000 readers. To read the article click here:

http://conceiveonline.com/fertility-news/heal-after-a-miscarriage/

New Dean Recommended for School of Nursing

Recommended candidate for Dean, School of Nursing, Dr. Kristen Swanson
Recommended candidate for Dean, School of Nursing, Dr. Kristen Swanson

Dr. Kristen M. Swanson, a nationally recognized professor and chair of the family and child nursing department at the University of Washington, will be recommended as dean of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Nursing.

Chancellor Holden Thorp told the University’s Board of Trustees today (May 28) that they soon would receive a recommendation for approval of Swanson’s appointment by mail ballot. She just accepted the position. The effective date would be Aug. 1.

“Dr. Swanson has earned a national reputation for her teaching, research and contributions to the nursing field,” said Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost Bernadette Gray-Little. “She has the right experience and skills to build upon an already excellent School of Nursing that is committed to helping meet the health-care needs of North Carolinians. Our nursing students, faculty and staff would get a wonderful successor for Linda Cronenwett.”

Cronenwett will step down in July after a decade as dean and return to the faculty next year as a professor.

In Seattle, Swanson is the University of Washington Medical Center Term Professor in Nursing Leadership. She joined the faculty in 1987 and has chaired the family and child nursing department since 2000.

A fellow of the American Academy of Nursing, Swanson is an alumna of the Robert Wood Johnson Executive Nurse Fellows Program, an advanced leadership initiative for nurses in senior executive roles who aspire to lead and shape the future U.S. health care system.

Swanson’s research has focused on caring, responses to miscarriage, and interventions to promote healing after early pregnancy loss. She developed a theory of caring that she and others have replicated or tested with individuals, families and groups experiencing a variety of health challenges. Swanson’s caring theory has been incorporated into practice and education models in health-care settings around the world. Her most recent research, funded by the National Institute of Nursing Research at the National Institutes of Health, was a clinical trial examining the effectiveness of interventions in resolving the grief and depression of mothers and fathers in the first year after miscarriage.

A native of Rhode Island, Swanson graduated with a bachelor’s degree in nursing from the University of Rhode Island in 1975; a master’s degree in nursing from the University of Pennsylvania in 1978; and a Ph.D. in nursing from the University of Colorado in 1983.

Her professional experience includes work as a staff nurse at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center, a clinical instructor at Trenton State College, an instructor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, and a research associate at the University of Colorado School of Nursing.

Her career with the University of Washington began in 1985 as the Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards individually awarded postdoctoral fellow. She became a research assistant professor in 1987, assistant professor in 1989, associate professor in 1993 and full professor and chair in 2000.

The UNC-Chapel Hill School of Nursing was established in 1950 in response to North Carolina’s need for nurses. It was the state’s first nursing school to offer a four-year bachelor’s degree, a master’s degree in nursing and to launch continuing education for nurses. It was also the first school to offer a Ph.D. in nursing, as well as an accelerated bachelor’s degree option for second degree students. Today, the school enrolls about 600 students and is known for its academic programs, research and commitment to clinical and community service in state, national and global communities.

For a photo of Swanson:

http://uncnews.unc.edu/news/health-and-medicine/swanson-recommended-as-school-of-nursing-dean.html

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