2024

Kelley Anderson, Alanna Bergman, Amanda Datesman, Louise Fleming, Jeanel Little, Paula Sherwood

6.1 

A host of new faculty members arrived at the School across spring and summer 2024, including associate professor Kelley Anderson, post-doctoral fellow Alanna Bergman, School of Nursing Health Sciences library liaison Amanda Datesman, Louise Fleming, the School's inaugural associate dean for academic operations and s professor, Jeanel Little, the adult gerontology acute care nurse practitioner specialty coordinator, and Paula Sherwood, nurse scientist and professor.

Amelia Walton

6.18 

The School of Nursing's first-ever embedded counselor, Amelia Walton, arrived in spring 2024, after two years in a private practice and after completing a residency and specialty training in trauma-informed care at UVA's Women's Center. 

Says Walton, a member of the Office of Admissions and Student Services and a staffer for UVA's Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS), "I take a holistic perspective, offer trauma-informed care, and, once therapy begins, look at skills that can be integrated into students’ routines. I focus on prevention, on off-setting anxiety and stress, and feel particularly attuned to and love caring for higher-risk populations (socio-economic, as well as ethnically and racially diverse groups) because it can be hard to find belonging and place at a predominantly white, high-achieving institution. I want all the pieces of these students’ identities to be known and cared for.

"I want people to know: all mental health questions are worth asking.”

Ashley Apple and Gov. Glenn Youngkin and VNA

6.27 

Assistant professor and family nurse practitioner Ashley Apple (BSN '18, MSN, '20, DNP '21), commissioner on government relations for the Virginia Nurses Association, joined leaders from the Virginia Council of Nurse Practitioners and Gov. Glenn Youngkin for the ceremonial signing of House Bill 971, which importantly reduces the transition to practice period for nurse practitioners from five years to three. The passage of HB 971 was several years in the making, and what Apple called “a shining example of the power of nurse advocacy.”

“NPs provide high-quality care," Apple said, "and autonomous practice expands our state’s ability to meet the needs of patients, particularly those in rural and underserved areas.”

promoted faculty

7.1 

At their June meeting, the UVA Board of Visitors approved the promotions of four of School of Nursing faculty members: Ha Do Byon and Beth Quatrara are now associate professors, while Meghan Mattos is a tenured associate professor and Ishan Williams has earned the rank of tenured full professor. 

Jeanne Alhusen

7.27 

Associate dean for research, NIH grantee, and nurse scientist Jeanne Alhusen was one of 30 celebrated nurse scientists from around the world to be chosen for induction into Sigma's 2024 International Nurse Researcher Hall of Fame in Singapore during the organization's 35th International Nursing Research Congress.

Alhusen was nominated by UVA dean emerita Pam Cipriano, president of the International Council of Nurses, and several other nurse leaders, all of whom cited the impact of her groundbreaking science and its "sustained impacts on improving the care provided to perinatal persons."

Alhusen is a family nurse practitioner who has earned more than $10 million in research grants as principal investigator or co-investigator across her career, and studies the experiences of women living with disabilities who are disproportionately impacted by violence, and, with their children, often suffer the ill effects of these factors throughout their lives.

"Jeanne's science is her powerful case for change," said Dean Marianne Baernholdt. "That her work shines light where there is little—people living with disabilities are often overlooked when it comes to research—makes it even more important, and me even more proud. There is no one more deserving of this honor." 

Randy Jones

7.28 

Nurse scientist Randy Jones (BSN ’00, MSN ’02, PhD ’05), an NIH-funded scholar, associate dean for partner development and engagement, and an award-winning educator and leader, was inducted into the National Black Nurses Association’s inaugural Academy of Diversity Leaders in Nursing (ADLN) for his “demonstrated expertise in nursing education, research, practice, policy, [and] administration as it relates to issues of justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion.”

Jones was among 53 National Black Nurses Association ADLN Fellows chosen for the group's first cohort.

The new fellowship is the latest honor for Jones, who recently was also recently celebrated with the 2024 Armstead Robinson Award, is a Robert Wood Johnson Nurse Faculty Scholar alumnus, and a member of the National Cancer Policy Forum.

8.1 

Self Care for New and Student Nurses bookDean emerita Dorrie Fontaine, associate professor Natalie May, and alumnus Tim Cunningham's (CNL '08) have published a new update of Self Care for New and Student Nurses, 2nd edition (Sigma, 2024).

The popular paperback book includes several new chapters on self-care, resilience, and must-knows for new and student nurses., including an interview about what new nurses should do if they hate their first nursing job, a new chapter on racial trauma and healing by UVA Health social worker Arminda Perch, a foreword by the Ohio State Medical Center's Bernadette Melnyk, and much, much more.

Order a copy in early September on Amazon or Sigma Marketplace.

8.1 

A newly launched Graduate Student Ambassadors program has begun and the School's first-ever cohort of paid ambassadors has begun their work to connect with prospective students one-on-one, share stories and experiences at virtual and in-person recruitment events, and occasionally do posts and create content on the School's official social media pages.

As key members of the admissions and marketing team, Graduate Student Ambassadors—including DNP student and CNS/NP alumna Corrine Gogert, NP and DNP student Shaolin Mosely, Sandy Ting, a CNL student and former educator, and PhD in nursing student and future nurse scientist Molly Yeo, a class of 2024 BSN alumna—will be an important and critical part of showcasing UVA School of Nursing's key differences to nurses seeking to take their nursing to the next level to earn all the personal, professional, and financial benefits graduate nursing degrees bring. Meet the Grad Ambassadors here

VASSA simulation faculty presenters

8.3 

Faculty members from the School's INACSL-certified simulation learning center turned out in force for the Virginia State Simulation Alliance, or VASSA, the Commonwealth's premier simulation conference for healthcare professionals.

Across six separate presentations at the July 29-31 event, UVA School of Nursing faculty and staff members Bradley Accipiter, sim tech specialist, Ryne Ackard, director of the UVA Healthcare Simulation Collaborative, Gina DeGennaro, professor, Andrew Guertler, senior sim tech specialist, Samantha Hudgins, nursing instructor, Emma Mitchell, associate professor, and Tanya Thomas, clinical instructor, offered VASSA attendees a glimpse into new simulations, best practices, and expanding educational and professional opportunities for sim staffers.

Shelly Smith

8.5 

Professor Shelly Smith (BSN ’99, DNP ’12) was appointed in July by Gov. Glenn Youngkin to the 14-member Virginia Board of Nursing, a key group that oversees the regulation of nurses, prescriptive authority for nurse practitioners, and in-state education programs for nurses, nurses’ aides, and medication aides.

The year-long appointment comes just as Smith’s two-year term as a member of the Virginia Healthcare Workforce Development Authority ends, a nomination she earned from Gov. Youngkin in 2022.

Claude Moore Nursing Ed Building

8.10 

The fall 2024 cohorts of undergraduate and graduate students are strong, after a strong recruitment season across late 2023 and early 2024 that saw a 100% increase in the number of DNP applications, a 48% increase in PhD applications, and a 42% increase in RN to BSN applications.

Though the official fall census won't be finalized until October 2024, there are, as of August 20, 2024:

  • 795 students (514 undergraduate and 281 graduate students)
  • 33% are first generation college attendees
  • 54% hail from under-represented, minority, and underrepresented backgrounds
  • 13% are men
  • Fall ’24 DNP cohort has grown by 57% over fall ’23
  • Fall ’24 RN to BSN cohort has grown by 23% over fall ’23
  • Fall ’24 CNL cohort has grown by 7% over fall ’23
Sept 25 What Nursing Program is Right for Me Zoom info session

9.2 

A first-ever "What Nursing Program is Right for Me?" Zoom info session with faculty members, admissions and recruitment professionals, and the School's new Graduate Student Ambassadors, who will tell their own stories and pathways into their respective programs, takes place Sept. 25 at 5:30 PM. REGISTER to join us!

Campbell Baker FAANs
Associate professor Cathy Campbell, left, and UVA Health University Medical Center chief nursing officer Kathy Baker, right.

10.5 

Cathy Campbell, an associate professor, and Kathy Baker, UVA Health's chief nursing officer and the School's associate dean for clinical affairs, will become Fellows of the American Academy of Nursing at the group's conference and ceremony in fall 2024. Their induction into nursing's highest honor society brings the School's total number of FAANs to 37, and its total number of national academies fellows among active and emeriti faculty to 57.

The School is also pleased to salute its alumni for their forthcoming induction into the American Academy of Nursing 2024 cohort of new Fellow inductees, including Thomas W. Barkley, PhD, ACNP-BC, ANP, FAANP (MSN ’89), Barkley & Associates, Nancy Crego (PhD ’13), Tina S. Gustin (MSN ’87), Danielle K. McCamey (BSN ’03), Karen Kane McDonnell (PhD ’13), Devon Noonan (PhD ’10), Jane R. von Gaudecker (MSN ’12, PhD ’15), Lisa A. Wiese (BSN ’84, MSN ’85), and Kenya D. Williams, (MSN ’13).

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