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Living CEREMONY Our sincere thanks to

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center & University of at Chicago College of Nursing

For sponsorship of the 2014 Living Legends Ceremony and Celebration CEREMONY

Welcome Diana J. Mason, PhD, RN, FAAN President, American Academy of Nursing

Recognition of 2014 President’s Award Recipient Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, MD, MBA, FAAN

Recognition of 2014 Civitas Award Recipient Janet Heinrich, DrPH, RN, FAAN

Recognition of 2014 Living Legends Kathleen A. Dracup, PhD, RN, FNP, FAAN Barbara A. Durand, EdD, RN, FAAN Colleen J. Goode, PhD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN Bernardine M. Lacey, EdD, RN, FAAN

1 P2014 RECIPIENT resident’s Award Risa Lavizzo-Mourey is president and CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a position she has held since 2003. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is the nation’s largest philanthropy dedicated solely to health and health care. With more than thirty years of personal experience as a medical practitioner, policy-maker, professor and nonprofit executive, Lavizzo- Mourey has built on the Foundation’s forty year history of addressing key health issues by adopting bold, forward-looking priorities that include: • Building a Culture of Health for all Americans. • Reversing the childhood obesity epidemic. • Creating a health care system that provides the best possible care at a reasonable cost. • Expanding the role of highly trained nurses. • Convincing government, business, and civic leaders to consider Risa Lavizzo- the public’s health when making decisions. • Addressing the social factors that impact health, especially among Mourey the most vulnerable. MD, MBA, FAAN • Ensuring that all Americans have access to stable and affordable health care coverage. • Supporting a new generation of health leaders. A specialist in geriatrics, Lavizzo-Mourey came to the Foundation from the University of , where she served as the Sylvan Eisman Professor of Medicine and Health Care Systems. She also directed Penn’s Institute on Aging and was chief of geriatric medicine at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Medicine. She served as deputy administrator of what is now the Agency for Health Care Research and Quality and worked on the White House Health Care Reform Task Force, co-chairing the working group on Quality of Care. She also has served on the Task Force on Aging Research, the National Committee for Vital and Health Statistics and the President’s Advisory Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry. A graduate of the University of and the State University of at Stony Brook, Lavizzo-Mourey earned her medical degree from Harvard Medical School. She also holds an MBA from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Lavizzo-Mourey is a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and the President’s Council for Fitness, Sports and Nutrition. She serves on the Smithsonian Board of Regents and several other boards of directors. She and her husband of nearly 40 years have two adult children and 2 one grandchild. Civitas2014 RECIPIENT Award Janet Heinrich is Senior Advisor at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI), Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) where she assists with State Innovations Models, health workforce evaluation, and portfolio management. Prior to joining CMMI, she was the Associate Administrator of the Bureau of Health Professions in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). The Bureau of Health Professions provides national leadership on the planning, development, and implementation of strategies and initiatives to expand and improve health professions education and training. Dr. Heinrich served as Senior Policy Advisor at Health Policy R&D, a strategic consulting group, where she led projects on a wide variety of health policy issues for diverse clients that included global corporations and national nonprofit organizations. Previously, Dr. Heinrich directed the public health team at the U.S. Government Accountability Office, where her work focused on providing JanetHeinrich support and oversight assistance to the Congress on bioterrorism, health DrPH, RN, FAAN workforce, vaccine supply and other public health issues. She also led the American Academy of Nursing, an organization of over 2,000 elected nurse leaders focused on expanding programs and the presence of nurse leaders in the national research and health policy arena. Dr. Heinrich was the Director of Extramural Programs and Deputy Director at the National Institutes of Health, National Center for Nursing Research, now the NINR. She was instrumental in working with other NIH Institutes in establishing collaborative research programs and joint funding opportunities, expanding opportunities for nurse scientists. Dr. Heinrich holds a Doctor of Public Health from the Yale University School of Medicine, a Master of Public Health from the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the University of , School of Nursing.

3 2014

Kathleen A. Dracup, PhD, RN, FNP, FAAN Sponsored by Dorrie Fontaine, PhD, RN, FAAN Martha N. Hill, PhD, RN, FAAN Pamela Mitchell, PhD, RN, FAHA, FAAN

Barbara A. Durand, EdD, RN, FAAN Sponsored by Geraldine D. Bednash, PhD, RN, FAAN Eileen T. Breslin, PhD, RN, FAAN Catherine L. Gilliss, PhD, RN, FAAN

Colleen J. Goode, PhD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN Sponsored by Linda Burnes Bolton, DrPh, RN, FAAN Ada Sue Hinshaw, PhD, RN, FAAN Mary E. Krugman, PhD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN

Bernardine M. Lacey, EdD, RN, FAAN Sponsored by Beverly Malone, PhD, RN, FAAN Barbara L. Nichols, DNSc (hon), MS, RN, FAAN Roy L. Simpson, DNP, RN, DNAP, FAAN

4 athleen A. Dracup is a distinguished nurse clinician, educator, leader, and researcher. Her professional career includes almost fifty years of experience in cardiovascular nursing and university Kprofessorships. Dr. Dracup was a faculty member at the University of , Los Angeles for twenty-three years and in 2000 became Dean of the School of Nursing at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), a position she held until 2010. She is now Dean Emeritus and Professor Emeritus of the UCSF School of Nursing. A member of the Institute of Medicine, she continues to be a leader in the field of cardiovascular nursing. Dr. Dracup is recognized internationally for her investigation in the care of patients with heart disease and the effects of this disease on spouses and other family members. Her early research in intensive care contributed to the liberalization of visiting policies for family members nationally. She was the first researcher to describe the quality of life of patients with heart failure being considered for cardiac transplant and the first to conduct a randomized clinical trial testing best methods of teaching cardiopulmonary resuscitation to family members of cardiac patients. She has conducted a number of randomized clinical trials testing interventions to enhance self-management of patients with chronic heart disease, to reduce the emotional distress experienced by patients and their family members, and to decrease morbidity and mortality from sudden cardiac death. Her research has been funded by the National Institutes of Health, Department of Defense, Atlantic Philanthropies, Kathleen A. the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Veterans Association and the American Heart Association, among others. She has published Dracup more than 400 articles, chapters, and books. PhD, RN, FNP, FAAN Dr. Dracup’s contributions have included her work as a journal editor. She served as the editor of Heart & Lung: Journal of Critical Care for over a decade and of the American Journal of Critical Care for sixteen years. As an editor of two interdisciplinary journals, she influenced many novice researchers and guided them to successful publication. Dr. Dracup is a devoted teacher and mentor and is well known for her mentorship of nurse researchers and clinicians. Her former students now are leading the way in the discipline and in cardiovascular and critical care. In 2003, she became the first nurse to receive the Eugene Braunwald Award for Academic Mentorship by the American Heart Association. She has been the recipient of many other awards including a Fulbright Senior Scholar award to , an Honorary Doctor of Science degree from the University of Technology Sydney, Australia, the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Heart Failure Society of America, and the Marguerite Rodgers Kinney Award for a Distinguished Career by the American Association of Critical Care Nurses.

5 arbara A. Durand is best known for her active and long- standing leadership in developing, advocating for, and promoting advanced practice nursing and the role of the nurse practitioner. BIn 1971, she pioneered the role of the Pediatric Nurse Practitioner (PNP) in the Pediatric Clinics at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) and was a key designer of the master’s level PNP program. She maintained a primary care practice from 1971 to 1981. From 1976 to 1988, she served as Clinical Professor and Director, Nursing Leadership in Primary Care of Children at UCSF. She was a charter member of ANA’s PNP Council in 1973 and a member of ANA’s Council of Primary Health Care NPs (CPHCNP). In 1978–79, during the United Nation’s International Year of the Child, she was selected to represent the CPHCNPs and the Division of Maternal Child Nursing as Commissioner on the ANA’s Commission on the Unmet Needs of Children and Youth. From 1990 to 1992, she served on the Executive Committee of the Division of Maternal Child Nursing. During the 1970’s, Dr. Durand testified before several Congressional committees on utilization of nurse practitioners. In 1977, she was elected to the Board of Directors of the Ambulatory Pediatric Association, and in 1980, she was elected Secretary/Treasurer — the first nurse ever to hold elected office. In 1979, she co-authored Handbook of Pediatric Barbara A. Primary Care which was named an AJN Book of the Year. She was awarded a Robert Wood Johnson Faculty Fellowship in Primary Care in Durand 1979, and spent her fellowship year at the University of . EdD, RN, FAAN In 1981, she was elected to fellowship in the American Academy of Nursing. Dr. Durand became Professor and Chair, Department of Maternal Child Nursing at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center/Rush University in 1988. She contributed to several AAN programs and initiatives: Nurse/ Faculty Practice Symposia (1982-85), Defining Faculty Practice (1985), Children with Acute and Chronic Health Care Needs (1989) and Differentiating Nursing Practice into the 21st Century (1990). From 1993 to 2004, she served as Professor and Dean, College of Nursing, State University. She served a three-year term on the Board of Directors of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing and chaired the task force that produced Clinical Essentials for Nursing’s Academic Mission. Honors Include: Outstanding Scholarship Award from NPACE; Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Conference for Nurse Practitioners; Presidential Award from Beta Upsilon Chapter, Sigma Theta Tau; Barbara Durand Achievement in Education Award established by the Nurse Practitioner Journal; Outstanding Alumna Award from the College of St. Teresa. Dr. Durand received her BS in Nursing from the College of St. Teresa, her MS in Maternal Child Nursing from UCSF, and her doctorate from the University of San Francisco. Since her retirement in 2004, Dr. Durand has continued to actively 6 mentor former students and colleagues and is continually educating others of the profoundly valuable contributions of nurses to society. olleen J. Goode is a highly regarded nurse executive, researcher, and professional nurse innovator, both nationally and internationally. Her impact on the nursing profession first became recognized when Cshe served as Nursing Director of a small community hospital. While there, she gained national recognition for implementing research utilization strategies by developing a video and guide used by more than 1,000 hospitals and colleges of nursing across the country and around the world. For these contributions, she received four Sigma Theta Tau awards, as well as one from the American Hospital Association. Dr. Goode’s innovation continued to impact the practice of nursing with the seminal publication in Nursing Research in 1991 on evidence reporting IV saline flushes were as effective as Heparin on care quality and cost. This report changed practice both nationally and internationally, and continues to show impact in unexpected fields such as veterinary medicine. Her sustained work in the field of nurse staffing structures and how they influence patient outcomes was first published in 1998. She continued with a 2011 research article in Medical Care, reporting that nurse staffing impacts nurse-sensitive outcomes in addition to patient morbidity and mortality. These citations represent a sample of the more than fifty publications she has generated while in the roles of Vice President for Patient Care Services and Chief Nursing Officer. Her influence as a researcher and outstanding nurse executive, transforming the culture of the University of Colorado Hospital into an Colleen J. internationally recognized evidence-based practice institution, resulted in AONE awarding Dr. Goode the Nurse Researcher award (2003), Goode as well as the Lifetime Achievement Award (2011). Her contributions PhD, RN, NEA-BC, FAAN to the University of Colorado Hospital, along with the Anschutz Medical Campus, were recognized with the prestigious Sabin Award for Exceptional Contributions at the 2005 commencement. As a graduate of the University of Iowa Baccalaureate and PhD in nursing programs, she has been awarded the College of Nursing’s Distinguished Alumni Award (2004) and the Distinguished Alumni Award for Achievement (2010). Dr. Goode was a leader in founding the first post-baccalaureate national nurse residency program in collaboration with UHC/AACN (2002). She continues to conduct research reporting successful program outcomes; more than 40,000 BNS nurse residents have graduated from eighty- two acute-care hospital sites nationally. The Academy recognized this innovation as an Edge Runner in 2010. She continues to lead in promoting innovations in her current faculty role at the University of Colorado College of Nursing, contributing to a new educational model to merge community college and upper-level BSN education. Dr. Goode unstintingly gives of her scholarship and knowledge, contributing to the Academy and other professional organizations through service on boards, committees, and projects. Her distinguished career represents a life-long passion for the advancement of professional nursing.

7 ernardine M. Lacey’s rereputation transcends from helping the disenfranchised child to the homeless man to the safety and health of children in public schools, especially in the Washington, DC area. Dr. BLacey advanced from Staff Nurse to Administrative Supervisor at Howard University/Freemen’s Hospital, to founding Dean and Professor, School of Nursing Western Michigan University. While at Howard University, Dr. Lacey was the catalyst behind Howard University College of Nursing’s movement to include care of the underserved in the curriculum, being awarded a $1.4 million grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation for the development of a nurse-managed respite center for homeless men, to which she was appointed Project Director. Dr. Lacey served as Professor and Chair, Department of Nursing at Prince Georges Community College; as Executive Director, Children’s National Medical Center, School Health Program; as Chair, Department of Nursing, Bowie State University; and has been adjunct Assistant Professor on the faculties of John Hopkins School of Nursing and the School of Nursing at University of at Charlottesville. She has served as Distinguished Scholar Lecturer at James Madison University in Virginia and at Regis College, Westin, MA. A much sought after speaker for various professional and civic organizations, Dr. Lacey has appeared throughout the United States, Africa, , Bernardine South Korea, , and the Dominion Republic. She has addressed the Congressional Black Caucus Brain Trust Forum. Her work was presented M. Lacey and documented in local and national radio and television programs and EdD, RN, FAAN publications. She was advisor to Nurse Award, the Howard University Hospital Legacy of Leadership Award, and the Western Michigan University Greek System Award as Professor of the Year. Most recently, the National Black Nurses Association inducted Dr. Lacey as a Fellow into the Institute of Excellence and life time achievements. She is an inductee to House of Omega, and to Phi Kappa Phi, where she served as President-Elect and President of the Western Michigan University Chapter. She is a member of the National Black Nurses Association, Sigma Theta Tau International Nurses Society, and Delta Sigma Theta, Inc., Sorority. Upon her retirement from Western Michigan University, she served on President Clinton’s Task Force on Health Care Reform and was a member of the Clinton/Gore Transition Team Task Force on Health Care Delivery. Her publications convey the message that she is a woman of compassion and commitment, caring for students as well as the homeless. As a result of her professional and civic activities, Dr. Lacey has received numerous citations and awards. Among her prestigious professional honors was induction as a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing in 1990, the Georgetown University Distinguished Alumni Award, the ANA Pearl McIver Public Health two generous donors awarded $1.5 million to establish the Dr. Bernardine M. Lacey Endowed Chair in Community Health Nursing. Dr. Lacey earned her diploma in Nursing from the Gilfoy School of Nursing, Baptist Hospital, BSN from Georgetown University, MA from Howard University, and Doctor of Education from Teachers College, Columbia University.

8 She is married to Dr. Wilbert Lacey, University psychiatrist for Howard University Counseling Center, a mother of three, grandmother of two, and great-grandmother of three. Living LegendsTHROUGH THE YEARS 1994 Living Legends 2001 Living Legends 2008 Living Legends The American Academy ••Faye Abdellah ••Susan Gortner ••Gene Cranston of Nursing is proud to ••Myrtle Aydelotte ••Mary Starke Harper Anderson recognize outstanding ••Mary Elizabeth ••Lucie Kelly ••Helen Grace Fellows who epitomize Carnegie ••Ruth Lubic ••Margaret A. Newman nursing’s proud history and ••Ildaura Murrillo-Rohde ••Florenece Wald ••Robert Piemonte serve as role models for all ••Hildegard Peplau 2002 Living Legends ••Phyllis Stern of us. The following nurses ••Jessie Scott ••Lillian Sholtis Brunner 2009 Living Legends are honored as Living ••Harriet Werley ••Rhetaugh Graves Dumas ••Barbara M. Brodie Legends in recognition of 1995 Living Legends ••Virginia K. Saba ••Leah Curtin the multiple contributions ••Luther Christman ••Gladys E. Sorensen ••Marjory Gordon these individuals have ••Rheba de Tornyay 2003 Living Legends ••Ruby Leila Wilson made to our profession and ••Virginia Ohlson ••Signe S. Cooper 2010 Living Legends society and in recognition ••Rozella Scholtfeldt ••Ira P. Gunn ••Billye J. Brown of the continuing impact 1996 Living Legends ••Ramona T. Mercer ••Donna K. Diers of these contributions on the provision of health care ••Clifford Jordan 2004 Living Legends ••Norma M. Lange services in the United States ••Mary V. Neal ••Florence S. Downs ••Barbara L. Nichols ••Dorothy M. Smith ••Juanita W. Fleming ••Betty Smith Williams and throughout the world. 1997 Living Legends ••Edith Patton Lewis 2011 Living Legends ••Mabel Wandelt ••Sally Ann Sample ••Patricia E. Brenner ••Mary Kelly Mullane ••Shirley A. Smoyak ••Suzanne L. Feetham ••Jo Eleanor Elliott 2005 Living Legends ••Ada Sue Hinshaw ••Doris Schwartz ••Joyce C. Clifford ••Meridean L. Maas ••Mary Woody ••Jean E. Johnson ••May L. Wykle ••Anne Zimmerman ••Imogene M. King 2012 Living Legends 1998 Living Legends ••Joan E. Lynaugh ••Anne J. Davis ••Vernice Ferguson 2006 Living Legends ••Mi Ja Kim ••Claire Fagin ••Kathryn E. Barnard ••Nola J. Pender ••Madeline Leininger ••Sr. Rosemary Donley ••Muriel A. Poulin 1999 Living Legends ••Marlene F. Kramer 2013 Living Legends ••Grayce Sills ••Angela Barron McBride ••Clara L. Adams-Ender ••Margretta Madden ••Ellen B. Rudy ••Hattie Bessent Styles 2007 Living Legends ••Margaret Shandor Miles ••Loretta Ford ••Marie J. Cowan ••Jean Watson ••Connie Holleran ••Phyllis G. Ethridge 2000 Living Legends ••Carrie B. Lenburg ••Geraldene Felton ••Margaret L. McClure ••Jeanne Benoliel ••Sister Callista Roy ••Shirley Chater ••Gloria R. Smith ••Thelma Schorr American Academy of Nursing

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