Wednesday, November 30, 2011

New Window on Nursing

During his visit to Penn Nursing earlier this month, Lancet editor-in-chief Dr. Richard Horton left us with a promise to write about the work we are doing here. A man of his word, he devoted his November 19th editor’s column to “Nursing, but not as you know it.” Dr. Horton called Penn Nursing: “. . . the country’s leading research-intensive nursing school that stands as an equal with its biomedical counterpart.” He lauded our LIFE (Living Independently For Elders) program, calling it proof of “the social value of academically led practice . . . Rarely will one witness such a successful juxtaposition of practice and research, care and inquiry.” These are extraordinary statements, particularly from the editor-in-chief of one of the world’s most esteemed medical journals.

Although nurses have historically been at the forefront of science and health, it is always particularly potent to see how the accomplishments of nurse scientists are viewed by our esteemed colleagues in medicine. What Dr. Horton saw in our programs are examples of how nursing makes a difference and how keen our faculty are to translate knowledge into care, action, and policy.

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